That's a stretch and very narrow viewpoint. You can ride a bike, take public transportation, bum a ride from a friend or coworker, rent a car, etc and on top of that, you can tell your boss the situation and they should at least be lenient.
It was a hypothetical. Obviously I can tell my boss some dude torched my car and I can't come in today or will be late. I noticed you didn't actually answer the question.
Is it a bad thing to torch my car if it is my means of transportation? Is that different from simply breaking the car windows?
If so then why?
Now you are arguing that violence == "bad" which is also a stretch.
Its not inherently bad or good but most people when they see their car torched see it as a bad thing simply because it was their car. The whole idea of owning that car thus depriving them of their possession.
I would think you'd be pissed if something happened to your car/house/computer/etc which would be hypocritical.
On top of this your job != your life anyway so the whole argument is void. Would you consider flirting with a coworker and being tagged for sexual harassment at the workplace an act of violence because you put your own "livelihood" in jeopardy? No, because if you get fired for any reason at any point you will still live on the next day and the day after that. Xant was the first person to bring up "livelihood" as a requirement which I don't agree with. Violence is strictly bodily harm.
Most of this is gibberish but I brought up livelihood since you used it as a defense after xant brought it up. "no one's livelihood is endangered if a ceo's car is torched" well some people really would have a problem with that and would lose their livelihood (which is their job.. not their life)
You also ignored my skepticism of an act of aggression not being violent. Interesting.