On Thursday, Tesla, Inc reached a milestone with 30,000 superchargers stationed worldwide, ahead of its plans to open the network to other brands of electric vehicles. The $7.5 billion federal program for EV infrastructure, which is part of the $2 trillion infrastructure spending plan President Joe Biden is expected to sign into law soon, requires charging stations are open to vehicles from more than one automaker in order to gain access to the funds. The news was not enough to erase the losses caused by Tesla CEO Elon Musk selling about $4.83 billion worth of stock after a majority of respondents on his Twitter poll, which Musk posted on Saturday, voted in favor of. Tesla’s stock may need some time to consolidate the volatility caused by the event and on Friday it appeared traders and investors were indecisive of which way the stock may travel next. The Tesla Chart On …