gmporschenut
gmporschenut also a fan of hondas@opposite-lock.com
gmporschenut

its the obnoxious radios that send me over the edge

“The Volt’s on board generator also limits your top speed to about 40mph last I checked. That’s not efficient, or convenient.”

it would reveal his combover

How much is range going to be affected by the obnoxiously loud staticky speakers?

“I wonder if he’s blue.”

Nauset or race point?

token liberal beat me

Out of curiosity how far ahead do farmers have to buy seed? Also how similar is the harvesting equipment needed to switch?

Oh that drives me nuts. “+1 bag” ...$130 more!?!?!?!

The Maryland case you discribed was double taxation. This is tax evasion. Georgia law already says it is illegal by not registering the car after 30 days.

I don’t think that would be the same, as Maryland was taxing income earned out of state. vs Georgia that is taxing something that is physically inside the state and thus its jurisdiction.

Uhaul is a weird case as they get to register as a trucking fleet. Similar to Penske out of Indianna or a lot of semis out Nebraska

I knew a guy. Everyone in his family drove really nice cars, E + S classes. For a while he was driving a 300c (cheapest merc). We went out and he drove, and every turn he would just crank the wheel. every corner you could just feel it was on the edge of grip. This as a 300c. I look over the TC light is constantly.

I have a coworker who does the same thing. You not impressive doing 60-80 pulls with hard stops. it just gets nausiating after 10 minutes.

It isn’t an apple to apples comparison.

States can only control what goes on within their borders. Out of state companies still have to register in other states, and pay any tax on income earned in their state. In the cases above the owners are violating Georgia law by not registering as an out of state LLC (and paying the tax on the car) or registering the

it’s 30 days in Georgia