dave1827
dave1827
dave1827

Well, it’s pretty simple.  If you’re the kind of guy who’s seen on TV any given Sunday, or maybe even wins the Super Bowl, you don’t want to drive off in a Hyundai.

The one David pointed out was toward the bottom of the LC barrel, but there are plenty of nice and more recent examples out there for under 30k.  It’s a good place to start.

As his daily and only car?  Yeah, it’s an absurd recommendation.

A used Acadia or Land Cruiser were the only two realistic answers. A more recent and pretty nice LC can be had under 30K.

I remember a few years ago when the taxi companies were protesting Uber, and the headlines around here read along the lines of the taxi companies having no right to claim territory, and that Uber/Lyft/whatever were the future, and to get over it.

I read this as “have you ever tried getting killed?”

4th Gear:

This happens everywhere.

I want to know where the numbers came from, because I feel like he genuinely thinks this will save consumers thousands of dollars and lead to more reliable vehicles by removing emissions systems he is told don’t really do anything.

Don’t you mean the agricultural size bottle?  It’s what plants crave.

What an amazing technological recovery after 2112, briefly described in an account put to music by Rush.

Yeah I agree, I kind of misread your original comment.

Jalopnik has even had stories about these devices before.

I think the process is pretty clear, as you said. It’s in black and white in the contract.

I’m sorry if I hit too close to home on the basement comment.

There are FAR FAR better choices than the Camry. In fact I think nearly any choice would be better. I stand by my assertion that you could get far more and far better for far cheaper.”

I don’t usually make generalizations, but I will in this case since you’re just being a complete shithead.

2500 miles per year? It would be impossible to use this for more than occasional weekend use, then. I don’t think this monthly cost is even comparable to a 10 or 15k mile lease that can be a daily driver.

This The Onion story is too realistic and hits too close to home with something that happened to my high school.

Seems like a perfect use for the land, then. People will be shielded from the pollution/poison by literal tons of concrete. It’s better than making it in to housing or something.