tfergusonmahacham
turd ferguson
tfergusonmahacham

Rear window washer fluid, no doubt.

"I think its priced better than yesterdays NPCP offering at least."

I'll embrace the concept, but the price is out-of-control CP—it would be a stretch at half the asking price. I mean, J-bodies got a pretty bad rap even when new, and they weren't great cars, but they were okay.

Adrenaline is a helluva drug. I broke my right knee as the result of a particularly bad crash while trail riding. Afterward I got up, brushed myself off, kickstarted the bike (with my right leg) and hammered it back to my buddy's house, pissed that I was likely going to spend the rest of the afternoon tweezing

Yeah, it's almost certain that there have been many "bona fide purchasers for value" who had no notice of any disputed title to this vehicle and therefore would have legally protected ownership interest in the car. But the real question is whether there is any evidence that Lee had an inkling that the car might have

"Don't know about the new ones..."

I don't understand why Jalopnik has such a hard-on for the unibody Explorer. It really makes you sound like the same kind of luddites that resisted independent suspension, disc brakes, radial tires, electronic ignition, fuel injection, overhead cams, light-alloy blocks and heads, etc.

Somebody with a grossly inflated sense of self-importance? As far as I can tell, this guy is CEO of a video-game company that is most notable for purchasing the back catalog of Acclaim's old games when the previous owner was in bankruptcy and gradually re-issuing the games. Evidently he has made decent money doing

If this was a private letter written to the GM of Ferrari of Ontario, or even to Luca di Montezemolo himself, then I'd believe the author was trying to make a legitimate point. But as a "story" (non-story, really—dealerships at all price points alienate potential customers in exactly the same way every day) published

Jason Robards and his Volvo wagon know the truth...

Groceries come in to the embassy . . . and Assange goes out, packed into the fairing between the windscreen and the cargo box.

I hope they buy their cage builder a beer. Every day for the rest of their lives.

Yeah, I like the idea of the 318is over the 325is, but the reality is that, absent a service history that shows it was done, the profile gasket job has to be added into the purchase price of the 318.

the need for oiled-up beach volleyball???

Neither. The iX is less fun than a rear-driver and the automatic makes it least fun of all. The convertible is more promising, but overweight, overpriced (and why lay out extra money for more weight/less structural rigidity?) and possibly rusty. The correct answer to this question is a late E30 325is or 318is. A

How about "riding into the Danger Zone"?

Now playing

Watch neighborhood legend Eugene Trebilcock hooning a Model T around his subdivision!!!!!!1!!one!!

You have to understand, I'm a car guy, and this guy is likely the type of person I also abhor. Be that as it may, I can set that aside and look at the situation objectively.

Reckless disregard isn't intent. Basically, it means doing something stupid (i.e., reckless) without regard for the likely consequence of that action. But it is not intent, just like negligence is not intent. That's why different statutes have different state-of-mind requirements, and statutes mean what the actual

ZiL—more than anything, ZiL.