well we know what the obvious answer is for Ford.
well we know what the obvious answer is for Ford.
1: Nissan Versa
The squashes range in size from an overfed ferret to an underfed beagle.
and the sloth had a job waiting for it.
IKEA says its new product, which it is simply calling “plant balls”,
When I eat it for breakfast, I eat naked slabs of it with by bare hands while leaning over the kitchen sink, and it still tastes amazing.
?
it can, but the chance that it would break the ball joint free of the control arm (or break the control arm itself) and not break or bend at least a couple of other things is unlikely.
Ford said in their release that they paid back half of what they borrowed at the start of this mess, so there’s that.
I like how some act like their tax dollars just disappear when the government gets its hands on it. Hint: the government spends “your” money on paying people to do stuff, which means they have money to spend (possibly on stuff you make) which keeps the economy moving.
Koegel’s >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Oscar Meyer >>>>>>>>>> Eckrich.
speaking of, that thing looks about as likely to end up on its side or roof as a Reliant Robin.
probably not a lot of overlap between “people out of work” and “people who can afford a new car right now”
that gave him a big headstart, but he didn’t really make bank until he cashed out of Paypal. He got really rich and famous by “making electric cars and landing rockets” which his fanboys seem to think he did all by himself.
Tesla fanboys adore him because he is what they wish they could be. An insanely wealthy guy who got where he is by doing geeky stuff.
the image isn’t big enough to be sure, but that looks like a cast aluminum control arm. Casting aluminum can be tricky; it oxidizes almost immediately on exposure to air, and if those oxide inclusions make it into the cast part they can be a stress raiser and the source of a fracture.
So I’m guessing you’re 13 years old?
I imagine you are correct.
I realize I was borderline using it as an insult, and won’t do that again. because it’s not.
Ford’s operating income, for example, which excludes the $3.5 billion gain among other things, was a $1.9 billion loss, a number that Ford says was $3 billion more than Ford thought it would be.