mkase76
Matt
mkase76

I’m sure the window tint industry will see a marked uptick in business for that very reason!

That attitude from a dealership?...Really?

Haha...That was the “well-loved” part. But you’re right, they’re still averaging a little higher than what I thought. Maybe in another two or three years, especially after the C8 gets more public exposure...LOL

I read your opening to mean you’re Canadian, so please forgive this boorish yank if that assumption is erroneous. In the United States I’m not aware of any carmaker that offers a process to purchase a new vehicle online, other than Tesla. You can certainly spec them out entirely online—colors, options, interior, even

Barely breaking the 500hp limit, but still surprised not to see a well loved C6 ZO6 on the initial list. Or even any of the comments I’ve read so far.

Those oil types with the descriptor “sweet” in their names, are literally called that due to their flavor on the tongue.  I shit you not.

Your point is somewhat correct. No, a test drive will not tell you (hardly) anything about what it will be like to live with a car over years of ownership. This is also why initial customer satisfaction ratings are less than worthless. But a test drive will give you immediate feedback on other important aspects like

Yup. Rank hypocrisy in the auto sales industry...SHOCKING, I know!!!! ;-)

I hear ya. Shoes are *ABSOLUTELY* something I won’t buy online, at least not without a free, no questions return policy. In one brand I’m a size 10, in another a size 8, and others anywhere in between.

That said, I don’t think advocates of online auto buying construe it to mean sight-unseen online auto buying. I

I’m not sure I understand the handwringing over plummeting oil prices. While it undoubtedly hurts the oil industry and its employees severely, it seems to me that depressed oil prices provide significant relief to nearly every other sector of the economy, especially those hardest hit like airlines and retail. And that

You believe you can rely on data coming from the government of Iran (data that paints the US in a negative light, I might add). You don’t see how life expectancy or mortality rates involve way more factors than just health care. And you believe that the New York Times has been a conservative news outlet at any time

Man, you’re making this tedious...

...but we’re catching up fast...Many a place are behind on the curve, and we’ll see the devastation from that coming this month.”

There have been numerous reports in the last week, especially the last 3 days, that the US is essentially at the plateau of the curve overall. In fact, hospitalizations, deaths, etc. are beginning to drop or stay flat in the hardest hit areas, like NYC. So while I can’t speak for Pocatello, ID or Huntsville, AL, your

Please remember that death rate =/= death toll. Italy has a death rate >9x that of the US, Spain >8x, and France is nearly 4x, just to name a few. With the curve now peaking as we speak, for infections, hospitalizations, and deaths, it’s clear that the US will never approach the rates seen in much of Europe and

Justin is generally ok.

Just like Italy and Spain.  Ok...Got it.

Funny how all the countries with death rates far higher than the US also have socialized medicine.

How is that the case? Sanders’ core causes were government health care and government control of much of the economy and country.