ROBOT CAR APOCALYPSE: Waymo’s AI Fleet ABANDONED, Paralyzing San Francisco in DARKNESS
Published
December 21, 2025
7:32 AM PST
In a SCENE ripped from a dystopian nightmare, San Francisco’s “future of transit” became a DEADLY HAZARD Saturday night as Waymo’s entire driverless fleet SHUT DOWN, becoming inert metal coffins clogging major arteries during a citywide blackout. This wasn’t a minor glitch—it was a HARBINGER of our terrifying AI-dependent future.
Panicked citizens captured the chilling proof: these multi-ton AI vehicles, hailed as our technological saviors, were rendered COMPLETELY BRAINDEAD. They didn’t pull over; they DIED where they stood, blocking intersections and trapping emergency responders in a gridlock of Silicon Valley’s own making.
Waymo’s sterile corporate statement, claiming a focus on “safety,” is a BLATANT LIE. Their so-called “safe” cars created a city-wide traffic seizure, proving the entire autonomous experiment is a HOUSE OF CARDS. One power fluctuation, and their multi-billion-dollar tech is as useless as a brick. SFGATE reports the truth: these cars are too STUPID to function without traffic signals.
The viral footage is damning: a convoy of Waymo vehicles, hazards flashing like distress signals from a failed civilization, parked in the heart of North Beach. This is not innovation; it is INCOMPETENCE on a catastrophic scale.
While thousands shiver without power, the real story is the chilling vulnerability exposed. We are handing over our cities, our safety, and our sovereignty to machines that FAIL at the first sign of real-world trouble. PG&E crews scramble to restore the grid, but who will restore our faith when the “future” is this fragile?
This is more than a traffic jam; it is a LIVE-FIRE DRILL for societal collapse, and the robots have already failed. The silence from Waymo is deafening—they have no answer because there is none.
We are building a world where a blown fuse doesn’t just darken a home, it paralyzes an entire metropolis at the whim of an algorithm. The dark streets of San Francisco last night weren’t just without light—they were without a future.



