blasds78
blasds78
blasds78

I don’t hate it. Except that shift knob/button mix (if that's what that is). I hate that.

Wut?

My kitchen.

It’s because it’s done by an author using the title of “news editor”. News is not opinion.

I’m not fooled into thinking Jalopnik (or any Gawker platform) is unbiased. It’s the use of words like “specious” to describe the conservatives’ viewpoint. There’s no reason for that from anyone referring to themselves as a”news editor”. That is editorial and won’t convince people who are on the fence. It certainly won

I said “probably”. And I said “to a lesser degree”. And included that as the last of the *possible* reasons, none of which were substantiated. They were all speculation. 

Nice journalisming. We’re all now well aware of your bias on the matter. Do they teach that in journalisming school? “Lesson 1 of reporting news: tell the story with clear signs of your bias.” This writing from a "news editor" is embarrassing.

Defensive of what? I'm suggesting other reasons people haven't jumped headlong into the EV market. I didn't say they're right. To the contrary, I said I'd be in if not for the looks. Though, buy-in is high for me, too.

Sharing opinions on the internet. So radical of me...

You seem smug. What if there are other reasons beyond fear of range or fear of change? You even hinted at one. They’re expensive, more than thrifty versions of Corollas or Mazda3s. People probably can’t justify the extra cost to get into an EV. Additionally, automakers have been making these vehicles (and other

This guy is not seriously trying to sell it. My guess is the seller has a spouse or someone pressuring him to sell it, and he doesn’t want to, so he listed it at a ridiculous price to say he tried.

That’s cute, Bentley. Meanwhile, the Toyota Century has a Phoenix badge of gold that takes six weeks for an artist to engrave.

Save for the paint job, this looks like every other hot rod of that vintage. Even the paint may have been done before. I’m sure I’m outnumbered, but....meh.

I knew hotwiring was pretty much gone, particularly among modern cars, but I didn’t know what else to call it. “Hacking” seems wrong, but I guess it applies. The current Cherokee was hacked a while back, so it's feasible.

Are the keys in the cars, or was it hotwired?

No chance I’d pay Mercedes prices for a Renegade competitor. I can’t understand why people do it for the diminutive Q3 or X1 or NX, and this seems even smaller than those.

It would be a definite market flop in the U.S., but I hope it happens. 

Is there a CUV version, because the USA won't care otherwise. 

3rd Gear

I liked it up to the point that it’s not a 4WD model. Great price, though, especially  in this condition.