turbopumpkin
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
turbopumpkin

If these images were accompanied with the headline, “The 2022 Toyota Rav-4: This is It” I would shrug my shoulders and scroll the next story.

Truth. All us “enthusiasts” swear that carmakers are just shoving CUV’s down people’s throats and that if they’d just make compelling sedans and hatches, people would buy them. Yet the most recent generation of sedans and hatches were the most compelling in American automotive history. I mean, the most recent Mazda6

Oh, that’s right, you think I NEEEEEEEEEEEED a SUV. Well, you are wrong.”

Because that’s big in China.

Make it a sportback and take my money, Ford!

1996 Dodge Viper GTS. It started a life-long obsession for 10-year-old me, and although it took a long time for me to save up to get one, I still smile every time I open my garage and see one sitting there.

Wild colors actually tend to have good resale, I believe. The most recent study I saw on the matter said yellow had the best resale. I’m sure it depends on the car, too.

Nice but they are about one and a half years too late to the pastel party.

I want to see colors, period. This myopic grayscale world we’re insisting on living in is obviously having a negative effect on the overall population, given how angry everyone seems to be these days.

Or be rich enough to not give a shit. Resale value is for the poors.

You need the right house and the right purple.

Sometimes the person complaining of being gaslit is the gaslighter themselves. That’s where it gets tricky

This, oh. my. god. so much this. I am sick of people saying that people are dangerous “gaslighters” when it’s really just a matter of the fact they didn’t see things the same way. I saw someone told they had dodged a bullet because a guy they went on a date with was a “dangerous gaslighter” because he said they had a

Mark Webber agrees. 

Yeah, when people say what they “need” they may mean something utterly frivolous, but they may also mean “this is how we’ve decided to prioritize our lives to maximize our happiness.”

they can probably walk!”

If this is indeed a high school kid (which I agree with), they can probably walk!

Also for those ham-fisted folks - you do not GRAB the wheel. It is not some grab-bar to hoist away at, as chunk is the enemy. You steer and while in control, you grip is loose, using your fingers, not your palms. Those “big hands” arguments need not apply.

Both parents work outside the home and the teenager’s school, work and extracurriculars make life much easier for them if they have a car.

Except something called a “1999 Windstar” probably returned to the earth 10 years ago.