shortyoh
shortyoh
shortyoh

Ugh. Everyone knows that sound. It sucks. While the damage doesn't sound extensive, and Seinfeld can certainly afford to get it fixed, the real shame here is that the car was a rare RSR model of which only 49 were built in 1973.

Agree... the mighty have fallen before and there's no reason Honda can't as well... As long as they produce affordable, reliable cars, they'll probably be able to maintain sales figures to some extent. However, if they produce cars that don't compare well to the competition, they'll eventually falter, relying

Neutral: Is Honda Right? Should we not count rental cars?

3rd Gear: People Looking For Jobs Again There's a belief amongst some economists that you're going to see unemployment rise a little bit and it'll indicate a stronger economy, because it'll mean that more people are looking for jobs who gave up on them.

Honda, to their credit, does not do this, which makes sense given that a fleet sale isn't the same as a profitable direct consumer sale. The subprime loan thing could still be a reaction to the economy so...

This sounds scurrilous, but the woman is paralyzed and had no feeling there. GM denied that the heater was defective or this was even possible. I have no strong opinions other way, but I'm curious.

Not just that, but for a liquid spill, the paper towel can be wringed out and reused to pick up more liquid. The diaper can't.

To be fair, another cop enters the picture at 3:17 (white shirt, tan pants, you can see his radio and firearm later in the video). He's already at the group when the officer in the foreground gets out of his vehicle, then appears to say something in the near officer's direction, at which point he turns back to

To be fair, another cop enters the picture at 3:17 (white shirt, tan pants, you can see his radio and firearm later in the video). He's already at the group when the officer in the foreground gets out of his vehicle, then appears to say something in the near officer's direction, at which point he turns back to

To be fair, another cop enters the picture at 3:17 (white shirt, tan pants, you can see his radio and firearm later in the video). He's already at the group when the officer in the foreground gets out of his vehicle, then appears to say something in the near officer's direction, at which point he turns back to his

If it was just one, I would agree with you. But the second arrives almost simultaneously with the first, and the third (offscreen, but you see the officer enter the picture at the 3:17 mark) shortly thereafter.

The odds of them all driving down the road through that area that closely spaced are pretty low.

Because if you had the audio on, you had to listen to ridiculous right wing tripe?

About 2:15 between impact and arrival of the first police cars. That's pretty darned fast.

Advisors are often useless. I had one tell me once that I was not going to be able to contribute to a Roth IRA because my salary pushed the income limits. The fool didn't understand that income limits are based on modified adjusted gross income, not salary. When you took into account other tax-deferred routes I was

Realistically, Social Security isn't going anywhere. We know that if they don't fix it, it won't have enough funding to continue paying its scheduled benefits, but it actually is projected to have enough funding that even without any fixes, it will be able to pay ~75% of scheduled benefits as far as the eye can see.

My strategy was simple - when I got my first job, I set a budget maximizing 401k and roth IRA contributions before anything else. Only after that did I figure out what size house I could afford. I've got an awesome employer plan (they contribute 12% of my pay, and that % keeps increasing), which is rare. The wife

Here's the basic answer - the math is simple, but you have to consider all the costs - including opportunity cost - and you have to consider ALL the alternatives. And beware - some automakers offer cash in lieu of financing discounts, but they don't openly tell buyers about this. You have to do your own research to

Yeah, these aren't the rates that any buyer with half-decent credit pays. Or anywhere close to them...

When I see cars like this, I immediately assume that they have been poorly treated. It's a gross generalization, but people that hot rod their cars are generally going to go harder on the engine/transmission/suspension. Which means that such a car is worth LESS to me than a factory stock one.

There are a few rare