4thgen
4thGen
4thgen

It would have to be complicated. A lot of people are sufficiently poor that they should not pay any tax at all. Would they have to prove their income level at the retail level to be exempt, stigmatizing them every time they bought something? Or save all their receipts and apply for a refund? The big draw would be

Sales taxes are problematic as well. Among other things, it discourages spending, which is a primary driver of the economy.

I got none of this garbage when I bought my GTI last year, so I was taken by surprise when we went to an out-of-town dealership to shop for my wife’s Alltrack. They had the right color combo in the right trim level and were advertising a solid discount on their internet ad. With the VW loyalty discount, we were

Are these any fun to drive? Seems like a decent package — maybe a little tight inside with all the road clearance. Not bad-looking at all though.

I feel comfortable in concluding that something like huge squares of gray plastic molded to look like intakes, but which are not intakes, are frivolous design.

Mazda Miatas are clean and purposeful yet exciting. A lot of the Porsche / Audi / VW styling is clean and beautiful. BMW 2/3 series is largely good.

I like the four-door hatch layout, the wheels, most of what I can see of the interior, and could almost learn to love the Accord-ish snout. The crinkled, dimpled, acres-of-fake-honeycomb plastic rear I just can’t reconcile with “cool car” no matter how hard I squint. And let’s just let wings on cars that aren’t

I think you meant “clean and purposeful.”

That’s always there, I’m sure. Consumer Reports I think insists on obtaining its review samples anonymously (or they used to). But the flip side is that honest reviews get the eyeballs companies want. All the weak sauce tongue-bathing puff articles in the world aren’t going to deliver the impact of one reviewer known

This is the vision capital has always had for journalism, which is that it’s just another transaction where whoever has the money gets to dictate.

I drove a 2015 BMW X1 the other day, and while it wasn’t “confusing” per se, the whole idea of nudging a self-centering lever until a particular small light comes is just bad design choice for a vehicle. For something as critical as what gear a car is in, you should be able to just look at the control itself and see

It’s not supporting “stupid” to argue critical controls in a motor vehicle shouldn’t require increasing amounts of attention just to confirm what they’re doing. Doesn’t matter whether it’s a lever or a button or a dial — you should be able to *look* at the control and know what setting is selected.

Examined one in person once and was impressed with the overall pol Sh (like a show vehicle from the factory?) and the air-conditioned seats (!)

I love the characters Harrison Ford has created onscreen, and I’ve heard he’s donated his time and equipment to do awesome things like search for stranded hikers in his helicopter.

NP out of pure Honda / Acura fanboism.

I went to J. school and did a little in college, and my take was always that journalists are PEOPLE. Nothing more or less. It’s a job, and a right, not a cultural position.

Good demonstration of “backlash.”

Are there actually any of these left that haven’t been swapped with a B18C and promptly hooned to death? Honda kids in my town were always after them for their low weight.

Never understood this. When I briefly worked weekends at a nationally known used car chain, the typical young family customers would come in and say something like:

“We need something that can haul 4-5 kids and their sports equipment comfortably, is easy to get in and out of, comfortable on long trips, gets decent gas

The more I hear from twisted Hillary supporters about how much they blame liberals who rejected her for a result that had much more to do with her being a shit candidate than with people “refusing to vote for her,” the more respect I have for those who didn’t. And the less I regret the fact we didn’t put her corrupt,