dolphs44
dolphs44
dolphs44

The best part about that is they didn’t clean the blood off the seats but they wrapped the steering wheel in plastic. Just in case one of those lot monkeys with their greasy hands has to move it somewhere.

Came here to post this. Bought my MS3 1.5 years ago with 55k on the clock for 13.5k. I have a 20 mile commute each way on California freeways. The manual and turbo combo makes any commute enjoyable. Hatchback is a nice plus - you can definitely fit a hockey stick or two with one or both of the seats folded down. I

The cobbler at Salt Lick is amazing

My friend a few years ago bought a Patriot and promptly volunteered to drive to the mountain. When I got in, I discovered it was 2WD - which prompted the same question: Who the f**k buys a 2WD Jeep?

Golf R is both manual and cheaper. I read it the same way you did at first. Should be something like “the S3 can be had for cheaper and with a manual as the Golf R.”

Here’s to hoping that all the ‘visual pollution’ nay-sayers have their properties destroyed by a massive climate change hurricane.

Wikipedia, however, is spot-on:

I’m so sick of all these fictional future car companies (Fisker, Faraday, Elio). They’re turning a totally viable (and badly needed) market for electric cars into their personal Kickstarter. Stop releasing headlines and taking federal handouts and make a goddamn car.

The only ‘clean’ coal I’ve found is from this article that describes the process of capturing and filtering CO2 and then injecting it deep underground. Which doesn’t seem like a very viable long-term solution.

Can we please address the blatantly incorrect statement that he made during the debate and continues to make that “there is a such thing as clean coal,” instead of talking about a few hundred birds? That statement is factually incorrect and is believable enough that people will jump on board. Hillary is clearly too

I didn’t know will.i.am’s newest project was infiltrating Fisker’s design team

I doubt anybody will do this with their personal car, but I bet it evolves into a thing where people buy Lynk & Co cars and just rent them out, similar to how Uber/Lyft evolved from part-time job to full-time job for a lot of people. The method is tried and true - it works for Zipcar just fine.

You and your little car-klatch could communally buy a Lynk & Co 01

What, you’ve never seen four people casually playing video games on a basketball court?

I remember as late as the nineties pulling into a gas station with our family’s Volvo 240 and my dad popping the hood and giving the attendant a quart of oil to pour in. I wonder how many attendants these days even know how to add oil...

These sorts of conditions might exist in Palo Alto, where the video was shot, but the rest of the country has to deal with cracked pavement, potholes, blotchy lane lines if any at all, gravel, sleet, slush, rain, fog, confusing old merges, obscured signs...

Yes, because I could have spent that five hours with my family instead of sitting in an airport watching CNN. And I get paid more than that at work. If I were making $10/hr, then I’d probably be OK with it.

I think the root of the issue is that they don’t simply have planes on stand-by, due to how ridiculous that overhead cost would be. If a plane breaks, they just push back the schedule for that specific plane’s route. It’s just plain bad luck most of the time. I guess a more rigorous maintenance schedule might help.

I haven’t found many cars (off the drag strip) that are loud enough to be obscene. Harley’s, on the other hand...

How about the FAA start mandating that airlines provide a credit or full refund for delayed or canceled flights? My one hour and forty minute Southwest flight last weekend was delayed four hours because of a lighting issue on the plane. They gave me a $100 voucher. Then on the way back that same flight was delayed an