therotaryisdeadlonglivetherotary
therotaryisdeadlonglivetherotary
therotaryisdeadlonglivetherotary

(And here we go.)

I don’t think anyone could reasonably dispute its merits. It’s just lazy and lacks imagination.

The weirdest part is how people have tried to claim sneaking a motor into a bike is a form of “doping” and not just “cheating.”

He looks like he’s laughing at something off-camera, completely unrelated to her, though. Which.. is a thing he’s allowed to do.

Could we have an actual discussion, maybe? Wouldn’t it be more helpful to explain to people who might not understand how this is not an appropriate way to draw attention to a worthy topic? Instead of mocking and condemning dogmatically, could we explore the ways that this cause could be better served, and educate one

So, funny story about this song. He actually wrote it to get out of a record contract.

Cheap, simple, reliable, and not too heavy.

I totally get it man. From my perspective, you’re nuts and make zero sense. But trying to put myself in your shoes, it’s perfectly clear. I really really don’t like the Camaro. I hate the way it looks, I hate how big it is, and I’m not enthused by LS motors like most people are. To me, there’s more to a driving

90’s Izusu Impulse had these. You had to lift up on the little handle in the recess.

Based on the headline:

I did watch that episode of Top Gear. I recall two key things from the review:

I'm not deciding at all, it's really more a comment on the systemic nature of unbalanced wealth accrual and the cultural acceptance of it. At first blush people say "he earned it", but when you look into the economics and structure of it, at some point you have to admit that the super-rich don't "earn" it with their

The SkyActiv-R and the RX-9

Bought her in September of 98. I was 19. 94 RX-7 PEP. Still with me till this day.

My 1999 Jeep Cherokee Sport:

Ratchet up the excellence and shape the passenger compartment like this:

Here is where things again get more specific, and it has something to do with expectations.

I myself once bought what you could call one of the most reliable cars of all time, a 1993 Lexus ES300. It was built when Toyota (according to the internet, the most reliable car company in existence) was making its fattest cars. By that I mean the car was overbuilt in ways you just can't see. Three heavy, long bolts