kmoney604
kmoney
kmoney604

Not including the soon-to-be-added “too secret for Trump” level of clearance which includes any top secret info you don’t want blabbed to the Russians or tweeted about.

Burn level - code word clearance

There are four rankings of classified information in the American intelligence community. Confidential, Secret, Top Secret, and code word clearance. The information that President Trump divulged was considered code word clearance-level intelligence, and thus it was above the Top Secret ranking in clarification.

STOP HARASSING OUR GREAT LEADER OF THE FREE WORLD MASTER OF DEALS HE JUST LOST HIS DEAR FRIEND THE GREAT ROGER AILES A GREAT MAN THAT SPENT HIS LIFE FIGHTING FAKE NEWS.

There was this one time when our car salesman turned out to be a murderer.

Impending comments of “but when I drive 120 miles per hour on public roads, I do it safely”.

Actually I bet that if the map had South Korea labeled many people would still not be able to locate North Korea. 

I forget how cringe worthy that is to watch.

Never

In high school we ranked the nearby girls’ schools in academic achievement and hotness.

I’ve seen plenty of Masters students that would get stumped by things like that.

Never confuse having an education with being smart. They are definitely two different things.

I agree the skip shift is a awful idea, but why bypass the hill hold, it’s a wonderful invention! your dad said “can” hold on a hill with the clutch, not you should hold a car on a hill with the clutch, doing that is a great way to wreck your clutch early. Driving stick isn’t just about being able to do it smoothly

I think your salesman was also BSing the frequency of Land Cruiser sales. If you could assume 1 per week is the average, and this represents the average Toyota dealer in the US, multiply 52 by the number of US Toyota dealerships, 1233. You’d get 64,116 LCs sold per year in the US.

That is pretty much the demographic Toyota looks after with the LC.

People like convertibles, even horrible ones.

They keep it as their second car in the summer. They put very little mileage on it and probably look at it as just a convertible rather than a sports car. These are probably not enthusiasts as such, so they see no need to go get a new one as long as it’s running.

Probably meant to say it was advertised as a fleet vehicle - so just bare bones, a work truck if you will.

Surprised/not surprised by the boxster. I mean I don’t know why you would keep it so long, but I see people with old boxsters a lot. Maybe its “my first Porsche” that they scrimped and saved for and have a hard time parting with it...especially since there is no real value in selling it.

I love the Atlas engines. I’m still a bit sour that GM chose not to continue them. It would have made an awesome base motor in the new 2007 full-size trucks, and I think that if they had made a reduced height, direct injected version, it could have done a lot of killing as the base engine in the 5th gen Camaro.