The underlying reason is cost. It’s always about cost.
The underlying reason is cost. It’s always about cost.
“Honda says 95 percent of mid-size trucks live on the pavement. But Sweers says 45 percent of its Tacoma buyers do go off-road, and that many spend lots of money on aftermarket accessories. He says “the typical after sale spend for pick-ups, depending on region and segment, is $3000~8000,” a significant figure that…
No in-car shot? I want to see his hands scurrying around that steering wheel like a couple chipmunks on cocaine.
To get super meta, the use of drones mean that they aren’t even touching the road/good intentions on their way to hell.
Second paragraph is perfect. Im stealing that.
Firstly I agree whole heartedly with most of this comment. However, in you first paragraph you stated people *should* be afraid of driving.
If the internet has taught me anything, it’s that putting some Redline MT90 in there makes any old transmission feel like new.
This Millennial signs off on your theory. Fear of danger is what drove humans to learn and adapt to our environment. It’s not an instinct for no reason.
Honestly, it’s the Baby Boomers that are the most problematic drivers from my personal experience.
Some people will see your survey results and think that its further proof that #millenials are part of an “pussy generation” or whatever. I think its actually a good thing. They aren’t fucking stupid. They should be afraid of driving. The problem is that the vast majority of drivers don’t respect what you point out,…
On a certain level, I realized that death was a very real possibility.
Part of the appeal for some children could be that Ash isn’t the best, and the show is probably trying to teach lessons about being a sore loser. Okay, fine. Part of the point of having Ash constantly lose is that it’s easy for kids to plug into the show whenever. This is Ash, a good kid, and he always loses.
I hope this has been mentioned around here before, and I don’t expect anyone cares, but historically “man” was a gender-neutral term (back in the middle ages the prefixes wer- and wif- specified “male man” or “female man”). This has a legacy in our modern language in the same sort of way that words that came to us…