john-john
Johnny Utah
john-john

I have seen some examples of pure-electric motorcycles being implemented with some success. I’m not sure if the KTM bike is up and running yet, but it seems to show some progress. (These were off-the-cuff examples) The range is limited and the practicality is non-existent but the opportunity is there. Here’s another

Yeah, but then I’d have to buy an electric two-wheeler. And the next wave of electric motorcycles is utter horse hockey. Europeans. (all said with a sprinkling of sarcasm)

My response is not from any angle, pro-concealed or anti-gun, but I was simply trying to construct a completely inconceivable situation.

So what is the perfect defense? I was going to go into a whole diatribe about how he could use the time machine from The Time Machine, but not the book one the one with that guy that also played in one of the Iron Man movies, oh, Guy Pearce, and then you take a trip back to the time the guy’s parents conceived him and

The thing that gets me is that there has to be millions of these things running around (and I’m factoring in the last three generations; YJ, TJ and JK). And for them to warrant this kind of “rare” price is ridiculous. I have deduced that it’s exactly what you are referring to in your comment.

I like how everyone is giving a nod to NPOCP. I wonder how Graverobber managed to miss this guy.

So you actually own one of the 287 that were imported that year? I hope you plan on keeping that summabitch for a while to enjoy it before you pass it off to some schlub who’ll run it into the ground. And that low number of imported American examples should at least make your car worth a bit more. Don’t ya think?

This can’t be like that forever. Eventually this bubble will burst and the people that spent $10,000+ for a 15 year old car are going to be pissed. Even the YJs I see on Craigslist are going for upwards of 5k. I just don’t understand it.

How in the world is the KBB on that thing 8,000? Was it in excellent condition, which KBB says only a small percentage will be? And assuming you bought it within the past 5 years, it was a 13 year old car and they were still asking that much?

I’m in the South East and we don’t usually get any snow, maybe a few days every other year or a light dusting, and all of the nice ones I see have chrome wheels, lift kits and big tires but never seem to be dirty. These are usually the newer, JK models. The TJs seem to have a more dirt-oriented consumer base.

Am I wrong in saying they never had the AWD with a manual transmission? And I can’t imagine how anyone would forget such a good car. Car and Driver had a full-page ad in almost everyone of their issues for a while back in 2011-2012.

Seriously. I see the TJs from the late 90s that seem like they have an asking price close to half of what they were brand new. I’m talking 1999s with like 160k on em. Either these things hold their value really well or Jeep nuts are high on something. I wonder how much they negotiate on price before they make a sale

I used to see those in the tire advert sections of Import Tuner and Sport Compact Car all the time and never thought in a million years that anyone would ever order a set of those. I actually thought they were just covers for steelies.

The Patriot could have been the spiritual successor to the XJ Cherokee. It had the lines going for it, and not to mention those round headlights (calling back the look of the O.G. Cherokee from the 70s). But it ended up being a front-drive, four-cylinder hunk of crap.

Viva la revolucion!

Same thing happened to me. I have a 1996 BMW 318 that was originally selling for $5000 cash and with the financing and interest came out that I paid over twice the cash price for it. I’m also pretty sure that car wasn’t even worth the 5000 in the first place.

And for breakfast an eggwhite delight with a hash brown is only 400 calories. I usually order an unsweetened tea with splenda so I can factor out any added calories from soda. Although a tiny McMuffin and a hashbrown is not entirely filling, it can satisfy a hankering for fast food breakfast and not take up 3/4 of

McDonald’s is also a good way to combat crippling loneliness and depression.

What’s wrong with having the option of eating whatever unhealthy food one desires? That’s a most glorious exercising of a person’s freedom if I’ve ever heard of one.

I honestly did not get the ad campaign in which Taco Bell was claiming to have revolutionized the chicken sandwich game. Its a fucking tortilla with fried chicken in it. They feel that it warrants an overblown statement of superiority every time they place something within the confines of a tortilla, as if a tortilla