souper7
G
souper7

The 370Z is too old and i wouldn’t recommend anyone pick one up......

“the Corvette is too expensive” is literally the only complaint I don’t think I’ve read on this site. It seems like the only thing Jalopys can agree on is that the Corvette has been priced really well for the amount of performance that you get for your money. Everybody here complains about the interior materials and

Especially considering interior amenities are not at all the focus of the 86.

“The steel gray, $25,000ish tester I drove early on didn’t even have navigation, which I think is kind of a crime for any new car in 2019.”

Hell, I had to get my Drivers license scanned to buy cold medicine

Sometimes the simplest tool is the right one for the job.  The ingenuity is in knowing those times.

This dude is a mastermind in the sense that a hammer is a ingenious tool

He’s already practiced his managerial face:

2 engine replacements?

That’s like naming your ship the M/V Nothing to See Here

The others work from a sleeping bag in the trunk of a Lada

You are TOTALLY correct. Man, what a bunch of misfit, oddball answers.

As per usual, you guys are trying too hard to score Kooky Points. $15k is a lot for this scenario, so there are tons of good options, including Subies. Personally I’d go with a 4Runner or Pathfinder (one of the good ones).

I’m here to tell you that Hummer was good, and America should forgive it.

Especially when you can only shift down.

The hardest part must be shifting those 53-speed trasmissions in the cars in those Fast and Furious movies...

When you start an epic slide in the rain only to have ESC reign you in like a joyless asshole, it always hurts my feelings.

Fun Anecdote: Dale Earnhardt Jr drove the Pace Truck at the Daytona 500 this year, afterwards, on his podcast he spoke about the experience.

Apparently, he was literally not allowed to go faster than 60mph on the track (this is ok since that’s more than enough to cover the pace speed) but this limit wasn’t just some

Who/what are they accountable to/for, exactly?

They set an offered rate, you can take it or leave it.

If they meet those promises and contractual agreements, they don’t owe anyone anything.

For the rest of this logical progression, please refer to my previous statement.... if it doesn’t work, someone will replace them,

And?

You don’t think another company, if they saw a power/money vacuum wouldn’t rise to fill that space?

If no one does, its likely because that higher pay rate is untenable and Uber was right. If someone DOES fill that space, paying more then the problem has been solved.... Voila.