mrordinary
Mr Ordinary
mrordinary

300HP is definitely not enough. Jesus, back in 2002, Ford gifted us the BA Falcon XR6 Turbo - that had 330HP. We’re loosing a Falcon XR8 that makes 450HP, a Holden Commodore SS that makes 410 HP - we won’t be taking no fucking limp wristed V6, mate.

With any luck, Australian police forces will stockpile V8 and even 6

“Best F1 race in years....”

low hanging fruit.

Some of the comments here... ugh

yeah I do... “Murica” and all that.

Kick some more Haas!

+1 for Sportsmanship!

I have no idea how Fernando Alonso walked away from that.

Oh my goodness... just watched a 15-minute qualifying race, live. Camaros, Rover 3500 SDIs, Ford Capris mixing it up in front... and a Mini taking on a Rover mid-pack! Exciting stuff!

Just watch them eat shit all season. This is F1 not some shitty oval racing.

HAAS are the backmarker... They’re basically running a Ferrari customer car and have 0 F1 Experience.

They’re still new, and ran consistently near the back in practice as well. (Worth noting that everyone does their own thing in practice and the times don’t really matter, but it’s all we have to work with at this point.)

I think you mean ancient aliuminium.

I think you mean ancient aluminium.

I feel like painting fake tunnels on brick walls is an acceptable way to filter out people who should not have a driver’s license. Every city should have at least 6 of these.

Everything moves (rattles) in my jeep, never thought of it as a luxury though.

No, it’s not dangerous.

Russian current foreign currency reserves ALONE are $360B general fund + $120B emergency fund= $480 Billion. This oft-repeated suggestions that the departure is driven by “running out of money” is simply not grounded in reality.

Yes they do, that's their job.

Great perspective as usual. Just wish you hadn’t called Assad’s forces “henchmen”. Not because they’re the good guys, but because there are no good guys. The “rebels” are not freedom fighters, they’re ISIS affiliates backed by the CIA and Persian Gulf oil states.

The West (US) and Russia’s goals were never the same in Syria. They could have worked together, unfortunately that never happened. One of the benefits Russia gained was valuable operational experience in a theater like this. Coupled with Georgia and Ukraine, their armed forces are getting combat experience.