relativepaucity
relative paucity
relativepaucity

I’ve got to be honest, it’s probably a lot safer for you than what I’m already driving. :D

Every task you do - balancing your checkbook, building a new addition to your house, washing your dishes, fixing your car - can (and should, in my opinion) be done with your children. It’s how they learn to do these things themselves, and gives them an example of “working hard” so they don’t grow up thinking life is

Would daily-drive.

Truth. I drive my Wrangler without roof or doors all winter, and people look at me like I’m insane, but the look I give them is the same: what’s the point of moving around if you have to be inside, in your little cocoon? I think they’re as mad as they think me.

And I totally understand the people who want to make that trade. I drive a vehicle that’s about one bad decision away from tipping over and killing all of the people, and my tires throw rocks at everywhere, and not everyone thinks 31 inch tires squealing is funfunfun like I do, and I understand when people want to

Huh. I don’t think I’ve ever thought of it this way, but I’ve had an inline-6 for almost a decade now, despite having 6 different cars in that time: a BMW e30, and then five different Jeeps. I definitely did not need a foreign car to get an inline 6.

You’re definitely not alone - you’re in good company with Mr Jezza Clarkson, for example - but certainly not everyone agrees with you. Most informed people agree that there will come a day when human-driven cars are outlawed, or grandfathered in with limited exceptions, and a lot of enthusiasts are excited about that

Is there an epidemic of door-dinging going out there that I’m just not privy to? This seems like a solution in search of a problem, but maybe I just don’t take my cars to the right places.

Is it not possible for people do to these things as ends unto themselves, rather than due to any desire to impress others? Can’t you be a minimalist just because you don’t like having a lot of things, not because you want to lord it over other people?

Impractical, and ineffective. There are people who need guns to survive or to protect their livelihoods (most of them in rural areas where gun violence is extremely minimal). No ban would be particularly effective, as it would simply create an underground economy in guns, the fabled “only outlaws will have guns”

We have 12 pets, 8 of whom have fur of one kind or another, and in my experience, there really isn’t a shortcut. However, the basics apply:

This definitely goes for bigger “tools” as well, like welders and air compressors and the like. When you compare the “new” cost of a Harbor Freight or equivalent to the used price of a well-maintained Lincoln or Hobart, it often turns out to be worthwhile to get the used high-end tool or equipment. It’ll be of better

To be fair, Plimer is a Professor of Mineral Geology, and the owner of some mineral exploration companies, and not a climatologist or student of volcanoes. He’s...kind of infamously unqualified to make the statements he does. While he certainly knows more about geology than I do, he’s like a neurosurgeon talking about

There’s a bucket of water. Every hour, a machine spits an ice cube into it. The environmental conditions surrounding the bucket are such that the ice melts at a rate of about one cube an hour, so you have equilibrium.

A Jeep CJ-5 to show how a 4x4 works at its most basic level.

Yes, always. My parents had a different method of parenting: show me how, then never do it again themselves. You know how to wash dishes? Then washing dishes is your job now.

Where’s the project? ;) This is substantially nicer than my daily-driver Jeep. Like, really, substantially nicer.

As an emotional response, I totally get that, and there’s nothing abnormal about the reaction.

As a rule, cars stay pretty rigid even with the doors off; if you shove your fingers between the door and frame while you’re cornering, you can feel whatever flex the car has to offer. My Cherokees bend like crazy, but not enough to ever really compress onto the door itself, and doorless hasn’t broken any of them

As someone who lives every day with a 20-year-old lifted SUV squeaking, rattling, and periodically grinding down the road, and as someone whose child drives a smooth, quiet, perfectly-behaved Audi quattro, I think about this dilemma all the time. I spent an afternoon behind the wheel of the Audi, and very very badly