By “uppity dealers” I think you meant “unethical scam artists”.
By “uppity dealers” I think you meant “unethical scam artists”.
It would have been a niche vehicle.
I thought it was such an odd placement for a dashcam, but I now see it’s actually a security cam to protect the suckers!
Why would you knit socks for mittens?!
It’s almost like they’re trying to distract people from the fact it’s entering it’s 12th model year...
AWD lifted hatchbacks/estates like the former Eagle and current Crosstrek could be a way to save Dodge.
Shh, they were buying it!
Maybe it was a creative decision that just don’t understand!
Also meanwhile, I’m driving around among you in a black Infiniti because even after all that owner still leaves the fob in his car.
With misio, there appears to be the facts and then their “facts” which are weighted more heavily due to “reasons”.
I’ve never seen a luxury RV with stained 1970s shag carpeting in Harvest Gold!
From her name, I think your “European” girl can be found in amateur porn that was filmed in a trailer home.
Arrests seems extreme, here this kind of thing would be handled in civil court.
Legacy name aside, the Nova was a good car and far better than anything else GM was building at the time.
I’d take an A1 , Q1, Q2 or even a T-Roc or SWB Tiguan if they brought them to the States, my only caveat is it’d have to have Quatro/4Motion.
Yeah, and the built in artificial limitation to competition with no price controls that was the medallion system that lead to speculators getting involved in the first place. If the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission had had any common sense or clue about basic economics they’d have put limits how how much…
And because they operated in that loophole Lyft and Uber’s presence destabilized the taxi industry and collapsed the taxi medallion market. Personally I think the fact people were having to pay $1 mil to drive a taxi in NYC was just a loophole waiting to happen!
Yeah, and that’s because of the new competition from ridesharing services.
Uber and Lyft have actually seem to have had a good effect on the taxi system in New York. 5 -6 years ago, due to speculators in the market, NYC taxi medallions were going for around $1 mil, last fall the average price was under $200 k, I mean it’s tough for the drivers who bought when the market was high, but for new…
Well, I wondered about Crown Victorias towards the end of their run too.