Fenderaddict2
Fenderaddict2
Fenderaddict2

Lawyers.

Like the red trackey and the Boss 302 track prep instructions, you're fine if it's for track days or amateur events. Just nothing professional. Also, make friends with your dealer.

What a wank. That was a total waste of my time. And yet done, I know, will praise its creativity, er theft.

Indeed. My Boss 302 not only outruns my old Bimmers, it breaks less and is more fun. Now finally, we may have the refinement to match as well.

I have a winter beater, a '12 Mazda 2. But if you're going to buy a beater, and have a classic (1964 Mustang Fastbavk, in my case), you have to compromise somewhere, at least till the kids are 16. For me that compromise was a standard Boss 302 as opposed to the Laguna Seca. Trust me, the two extra seats is a big deal,

back seats.

But for many of us, that is the very argument that puts cars like this on the driveway alongside the wife's Dodge Journey.

I wonder if the owner has shared his story on Camaro5.com yet?

Now that's an internship.

I like some GM cars, I really do. And I respect the engineering but I find it hard to like the company and its attitude of excuses, copying, lying, cheating and its generally poor approach to management culture.

I for one, will be glad to see the folding tin top go. I've owned several cabriolets over the years and hated the additional complexity, cost, bulk, affect on handling and space the tin tops brought to cars I loved. Then there was the fact they all squeaked and groaned after a few years. Advice to BMW, if you want me

Meh.

Bought a Mazda 2 as my winter beater when it came time to store my cars last winter. The little gremlin looking thing is so much fun to drive I just kept it running all year clocking 60k just yesterday. And crap, can this thing corner! Downside? Most tickets I've collected in a car. And I've owned plenty of cop bait

I am in 100% agreement with your last statement, that we should pay workers a living wage. And I have been profit-sharing since the mid-nineties, but the problem is expectations. We all expect a fancy house, fancy cars, and massively large Big Screen TV's but we won't work hard and save for them... we want them now!

Just because I own businesses, does not make me part of the one percent, and no more immune to changing market conditions than my employees.

Not saying they'll suffer from retail competition. Walmart is a volume play. Their margin is in moving as much stuff as possible in the shortest amount of time. Squeeze their margin and they need to move more and buy cheaper. So less staff may have to do more, and products will need to be made and supplied cheaper. So

Really? And you own how many companies? Sure I'm oversimplifying. But once North Americans started living beyond their means with leases, credit, and money borrowed against perceived increases in property value we helped increase the divide between rich and poor while masking it. Many companies and individuals for