Yeah, I don't mean to insinuate that hitting Ward was definitely Stewart's intent, just that suggesting it isn't ridiculous, considering the circumstances and what we can see on video. Hopefully we'll hear soon.
Yeah, I don't mean to insinuate that hitting Ward was definitely Stewart's intent, just that suggesting it isn't ridiculous, considering the circumstances and what we can see on video. Hopefully we'll hear soon.
I think to suggest that he set out last night to kill someone is ridiculous. To suggest that he gunned the engine with the intent of at least clipping Ward is probably not as ridiculous, but will be determined soon enough.
I'm not gonna start throwing some of the words around that others have been. A race track is no place to walk around waving your arms around. To suggest he did it on purpose is ridiculous. HOWEVER, to make the decision to race later in NASCAR, if true, is a potentially stupid and insensitive mistake.
I don't know if I can believe that. 50 yards is an awful long way - half a football field. How can you get thrown that distance from under a car? I'm guessing this person isn't great with visualizing distance.
I agree. Wait until you are both in the pits. Sure you might not be as angry but getting out of your car and walking towards other moving race car is kinda dumb. I'm sure Tony wasn't aiming to hit him probably just wanted to scare him.
I assume waiting for more factual evidence then just a bunch of tweets.
Thoughts to the injured driver and his family. Stewart is known for being passionate but I can't imagine him doing anything deliberate such as this.
Relax man. It's only a few gallons per pass for entertainment. Think of how many gallons you wasted going on vacation.
Says the clean cut white guy. Simply being at a protest, which is an activity protected by the constitution has ended in a lot of unearned beatings.
Let me stand in opposition to this dogpile you are getting. Bluetooth audio protocols are incredibly low resolution and shoddily compressed. I don't know how anyone could listen to them and not cringe. Probably the same people who think 256k MP3's are hi-fi quality. As to call taking, best thing to do is not…
I see your complaint and raise you one Ford Fiesta sedan.
To this day I've never touched Bluetooth anything, I've always associated it with douches talking loudly to themselves in public. As for using it in cars, I guess it's the lesser of evils, but it's probably better to ignore your phone and drive.
Dude. Most of my articles are lies.
I read a few of the comments here and there, just because they get e-mailed to me (even though I have ALL e-mail notifications off, which is beyond annoying). Usually just for a laugh.
Haha. Frankly, that's the most interesting part. Although what I'm really doing is trying to get the people-intensive videos out of the way before I leave Atlanta and move to Philadelphia where I have no friends. So really I'm using all my friends as cheap video stars before I go. It's excellent.
This. I love NPR, but Glinton's stories always come off as half-researched and hastily put together. The ones he's done on more "complicated" technology, like electric vehicles have been particularly egregious.
My son and daughter, 9 and 5 respectively, have helped and/or watched me change oil multiple times, rotate tires, replace brake discs and pads, replace a caliper, bleed brakes, replace a swaybar, replace swaybar links, drain and fill a rear differential, tear apart the top of an engine to do a valve adjustment, and…
I learned car repair from my mom, and my dad was the cook while both worked. I'm sure that if I told this to NPR, their fucking heads would explode from an neural stack-overflow stemming the inability to comprehend such a thing.
You should have heard me screaming at the radio last night while I was making dinner. My wife came running into the kitchen, she thought I had cut my finger off or something.
Nope honey, just yelling at the idiots on NPR like they can hear me.
This whole "American manhood" series has been patently stupid, and this was…
I like NPR as well, but Sonari Glinton seems to come from an angle of "if I can't understand something then no one else can, either."
Let me be up front and say that I actually like listening to All Things Considered. What I'm less crazy about…