The Silverado 1500 crew cab model is manufactured in Silao, Mexico. If those trucks’ VINs start with 3, which they very likely do, they were made in another country.
The Silverado 1500 crew cab model is manufactured in Silao, Mexico. If those trucks’ VINs start with 3, which they very likely do, they were made in another country.
I have a pair of radios in the house that see daily use—a bookshelf one for the kitchen and a clock radio in the master bath—but then I’m An Old so that’s likely a factor.
“I have given this matter a good deal of thought” and “I think it is a good idea to post it on Twitter” are mutually exclusive concepts.
For my money, though, I’m increasingly in on the Mitsubishi Mirage.
I cannot wait for the debates, where president sniffy-sniff has to go toe to toe with someone who’s had his number from day one.
The takeaway here should not be “expressing yourself is bad.”
A hit dog will holler.
I’m curious how many of those views are uniques vs. how many are people playing the same movie repeatedly as background noise.
Really nice, but not at this price. This smells a hell of a lot like “doesn’t really want to sell it/going through the motions” pricing. It’d be worth a second look at maybe half that, though.
The hospitals that will comply are those located in red states with red governors which—not coincidentally and to no one’s actual surprise—are the ones in the worst shape with the highest amount of cases and the most appalling trend lines.
He’s more of a “what” than a “who”—always has been—but no disagreement here.
All the president knows how to do is react and attack. He does not plan, plot, or fall back. He is a brute force animal with only one drive: forward.
This really shouldn’t be a surprise. Have you seen what they eat?
Atlantis (Ancient Greek: Ἀτλαντὶς νῆσος, “island of Atlas”) is a fictional island mentioned in an allegory on the hubris of nations in Plato’s works Timaeus and Critias
It’s technically illegal, but then so’s about 95% of what this regime does on the daily, so... yes and no, depending.
When a sentence starts with a claim, adds “but,” then introduces an opposing or contradictory claim, the statement that precedes “but” is a lie that the writer/speaker desperately wishes—and needs the reader/listener to believe—is the truth.
For whatever reason I thought “bagger” meant, like, “air bag suspension” and I was mightily confused until I got to “Road Glide” and went “ahh, okay.”
Or, unlike the US federal government, they don’t make a habit of kowtowing to corporations, giving them free reign to do whatever they want until they kill hundreds of thousands of people because profits, lobbyists, and campaign contributions.