dougradcliffe
Doug Radcliffe
dougradcliffe

Simply, because the Chinese keep buying and have been paying premium prices to boot. In the long term this may have repercussions for said companies, but that's one of the problems with this whole China v The West thing, those in powerful positions in western democracies (be that elected officials or corporate

That's probably taking some of the more extreme examples, unlucky people that just happen to live and work just either side of the slip, but, yeah, it's a pretty awkward route so I'm sure that's true for some.

It all depends on exactly where you're going from and to. If you're going from central Bath to central Bristol no problem, most people would take the A4 on the south side of the river anyway, but for more localised transport this has been a major pain in the ass, if you look at the map there are no road bridges

Oh god, is this parody or not? I honestly can't tell

You can get shockingly cheap flights from the UK to North Africa. That said, it is unlikely somebody would be able to do that on unemployment benefits alone. It's possible the woman has savings that allow her to travel like this, but being as Tunisia is such a popular family package holiday destination my guess would

OK, this was a flight from a tiny, insignificant country called Tunisia, to another tiny, insignificant country called Scotland. Both these countries are in a tiny, insignificant part of the world called not-America. Amazingly, this is actually outside of the TSA's jurisdiction, as, stupidly, these countries actually

Oh come on, places that aren't America aren't actually real. That would be ridiculous.

Looks shit. I bet it'll sell loads.

That thing? Used off road? Not to any serious degree, it'd either break or fall over.

Oh yeah, it's real alright. Crazy thing is, all you have to do is put dually into Google image search. You do get a few pics of legitimate work trucks, but mostly it's either crazy lifted bro trucks or even weirder slammed trucks. This is the only one I saw where they had actually put four wheels on the front,

Bro do you even . . . . something to do with number of wheels

That looks like it would be a lot more usable. What is it?

Oh god! What is that first one? Is that a 3-series Compact with the nose of something else grafted on? And why, why are the wheel arches so BIIIIIIGG?

Cool. LOL.

No. The Renegade is based on the 500L, the picture is a Panda, which is much smaller and on a different platform.

Funny. Where I come from this is an Allegro. They were neither powerful nor luxurious.

Nice factoid. We now need a Jalopnik article about the interesting-car-aminos of Denmark.

Does this count as a vehicle? I've lived on her for 5 years.

Take a rebuilt-after-WW2 European city like Warsaw, plenty of fast, wide roads like you'd commonly find in the US, then take a historic US city like San Francisco, plenty of narrow rat runs like you'd commonly associate with Europe. Not every European city has the tight, cobbled streets of Amsterdam, but almost every

OK, sorry to burst your bubbles and all, but, no, this is not "basically a Renegade". The Panda is based off Fiats mini platform, like the 500, the Renegade off their small platform, like the 500L. The Renegade may be awesome, but it is not this. This is, by any standard, even European standards, a small car, like