GirchyGirchy
GirchyGirchy
GirchyGirchy

Can you imagine the Boomer factory original MOPAR types with something like your parts-bin special?

This happened in cities all over the country. Most street car lines were privately owned. Companies like General Motors started buying up lines and shutting them down so they could push buses. Now a lot of people (including myself) wish the rail lines were still around. 

I also hate people that have undertaken great financial risk to carve out their slice of the American Dream.

The twin cities in MN tore up all the extensive streetcar lines way back in the day and are now replacing replacing the for a billion dollars a line. If they would have only kept them going and upgraded as needed.

The grey one is based on an old school Revell model kit-

...but in no way follows through and actually does it.

Goddamnit Nissan, get your shit together and starting doing more cool stuff 

He’s transphobic and full on NIMBY?

In case you were wondering if Dave Chappelle has gone full asshole, yeah, he’s apparently willing to pull all his investments out of a town if poor people move there.

It also comes from the factory with assorted pills in an unlabeled bottle, a 9mm, and 5 outstanding warrants.

Luxury. As imagined from a rubber room.

Worth repeating.

Considering how Sarah Palin of all people apparently has the New Yawk Times by the short hairs over an Opinion piece:

100% confirmed FACT.

Texas Mode engaged: Attack Cyclists

He lost his job and went to jail for this and lost his license for almost 3 years.

Nope, they would never fix it and just charge damages to every subsequent renter who didn’t point it out when leaving the lot.

Came to ask, didn’t have to scroll far. 

Yeah, it was so weird the number of people commenting a while back saying how useless the truck was and how it would never sell.... didnt make a darn lick of sense....

granted, I fall in to the category of “i use my truck to tow, and this doesnt have enough capacity.” but I can look down my street and see that 95% of

Still not enough.