terrifichost
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terrifichost

I spent $89 on a whisky last week, and still feel guilty.

See above. The corporations get something out of it too.

They set this up in the 1980s, and its created a huge pool of investible funds (currently the third-largest in the world) that keep the market happy. Nobody has an incentive to change it.

That’s the problem with hybridoodle electric things. They just sneak up on you.

What’s its power level????

Nobody is banning gasoline.

It’s basically the railway companies in the 19th century. 

It could easily have 10% of the market in 10 years time, if two things are true:

I really like dollar-cost investing. Most of what’s left after expenses and rent each week goes into a solid low-emissions fund (anything exposed to oil, gas, and coal can only go down in the medium term), every single week.

This is so bad I can’t even watch.

This was pre-decimalisation, so I suspect you’re right.

I put the price in the Bank of England inflation calculator.

The side glass slides open.

This looks really good; it would suit us. Hopefully the prices are not insane (whatever happened to $100kWh batteries?) when this eventually goes on sale.

Firstly: make this electric. Even if the range is terrible, I don’t care.

I like how we do things in Australia. Employers pay out a compulsory percentage on top of wages (currently 9.5%, gradually heading towards 12%), which go into funds that you can’t touch until you retire.

I always thought the Citroen C4 Cactus was a brilliant idea. Why not put rubber bumpers everywhere? (Or as my friend used to say about it: ribbed, for extra pleasure.) 

The trick is having some good used carpet to lay down and take the scuffs.

Are those rocket engines?