lol I was getting that sentiment while scrolling the comments and then saw yours. And on the other hand they’ll complain about everything being boring.
lol I was getting that sentiment while scrolling the comments and then saw yours. And on the other hand they’ll complain about everything being boring.
95% of the comments on this blog will be about bros with small wieners who can’t please a woman, high gas prices, and sky rocketing interest rates. The comment section has become a giant echo chamber for wet blanket types.
700+hp, 37 inch wheels, 2195 kg (4900 lbs). Around here I’ll continue to see them at mall parking lots, cruising our main street at night, crawling back alleys picking up “friends”, and generally looking spotless.
Not true! Water tastes much better.
“Only” $18-20K for a used car. Read what you wrote. That is more than I paid for my brand new Honda Fit 11 years ago.
Q: What’s the difference between a water fountain and a Bud Light dispenser?
Well, there’s the Nissan Leaf, for environmentally-conscious frugal people, but I agree with you. We, the taxpayers, already paid for a big tax credit for EV buyers, the gas tax pays for road maintenance (or whatever the .gov diverts those funds too) but EV’ers don’t pay that, and now we have to give them free “fuel”…
While the idea of providing free gas/diesel is ridiculous, the idea that we should use public funds to provide free BEV charging is pretty unfair. Let’s be real, the only people buying BEVs right now are relatively rich people who have a couple other ICE vehicles back home.
Stop electing morons.
Could set a good precedent. Next up, free beer required by water fountains.
Yet they’ll still bitch about gas prices because, you know, “Biden”.
Someone who can afford to spend $150k on a truck won’t care much about spending another $20k on gasoline.
A perfectly good road rat for $2500. Ride it hard, haul stuff, drive it in the city and park it on the streets without worrying about it. Nice Price.
I’d venture to say 70% will be bought by affluent bro types and will see less than 3k miles per year. The other 30% will be repo’d in 1 to 2 years and will be pretty affordable since we’ll be in a recession by then. Not sure I’d want to buy one of those 30% though, they’ll probably be hammered on. Even now, I hardly…
ah yes single digit fuel economy just in time for $10 a gallon gas. but dont worry youll be able to finance this for 96 mo at 9% after the upcoming rate hike. throw on the dealer markup and im sure this is a $150k truck no one will be able to afford to drive