Teslas are driving on the road or in parking lots but wearing Toyota, Honda or Mazda logos.

Some Tesla owners are using the same method to show that they have nothing to do with billionaire Elon Musk: removing the Tesla logo from their cars and replacing it with the logos of other automakers.

There have been reports of increased sales of stickers that say “I bought this car before I knew Elon was crazy.” A business that sells these stickers says it sells hundreds of them a day as Tesla owners try to distance themselves from the company’s CEO.

The Cybertruck pickup truck has a large Toyota logo on the back. Photo: mildlyinteresting

Tesla Model 3 with Toyota logo. Photo: izaNsInolE

Another Model 3 with Honda logo. Photo: Seattlesubmissions

Tesla Model 3 transformed into Honda Civic. Photo: Manwich

This Tesla has the full set of logos from the Mazda CX-5. Photo: izaNsInolE

An Audi A5 that’s actually a Tesla Model 3. Photo: Stonk King

A Tesla owner in Norway switched to a BMW logo. Photo: Frode Olsen

Some Tesla owners are even worried about people vandalizing their cars. Changing the logo as a creative, witty way to separate Tesla ownership from the billionaire is causing a lot of controversy.

Since President Donald Trump was elected, Elon Musk has shown his role as a close ally with many moves supporting Trump as well as his decisions. Recently, Musk attended the first cabinet meeting at the White House, overshadowing other ministers, and also spoke out in support of the US withdrawal from NATO and the United Nations.

On March 1, New York City police arrested 9 people during a protest outside a Tesla dealership when they protested billionaire Elon Musk’s role in cutting staff and streamlining the US federal apparatus.

Not only in the US, the wave of protests against the American electric car company and Musk appeared in some places around the world. On the night of March 2, more than 10 Tesla cars caught fire at a store in Toulouse, France, with the initial cause being believed to be sabotage. The total damage is estimated at more than 700,000 euros ($734,000).