sullyy
Sully
sullyy

brb

Just to be clear, Canada’s in North America, so it’s still an American car.

Ugh, one of those comments.

So does that mean my neighbor’s Mercedes GL350 is considered an American car? And that the CLA-Class is not German but Hungarian?

The generally accepted rule is that it’s the manufacturer’s country of origin, not where it’s built.

Cheers.

Until they remove the door handles and charge you $10k extra for fireproof straps to replace them Porsche owners will remained unimpressed.

Here’s some free speech for you: Shut the fuck up.

“I’m a stay-at-home model, and Mark works part time at a local kombucha brewery. Our budget is $1.2 million.”

You’re not supposed to consume the museum exhibits!

FREEDOM OF SPEECH! FREEDOM OF PROTEST!

Wonder how many confederate flag wavers are telling Hillary supporters “you lost, get over it”?

So what’s the problem??? It is a way for employer to encourage employee to stick around. You stick around long enough, and your equity grants vests, and your income ramps up nicely.

If a person must argue with another over the pun and a correction, then said person needs to go to HR to be retrained on how to “post with others on blogs”.

Can we just agree you’re both dolts?

While unions had their place back in the day, I think it has been proven very well by Toyota, Nissan, Mercedes, BMW and VW at their American plants that you can pay a living wage, benefits and bonuses without the burdensome overhead of a union. Maybe Musk should do a COLA adjustment, but otherwise I don’t think a

The word you’re looking for is gird. A guild is what Elon is fighting against.

best guild your loins, elon - they’re getting assembled and lining up for a fight.

It’s a mature reading of the situation that relies on nuance to make its point.

Incorrect. Those are park-anywhere lights.

Huh, I guess BMW’s do have turn indicators.

The solution to that should be easy. Not belted? “I’m sorry, your injuries are not covered due to personal negligence.” I’d vote for anyone who agreed to sign that into law in a heartbeat.