wilson_c
Wilson
wilson_c

Sure, you *can*. But you're unlikely to prevail unless the owner has done something that would actually make them liable for those damages. Just because some case went this way at some point doesn't mean there's legislation making all owners liable for everything done with their property. The devil is in the

I'm pretty sure that "the gays" used this way is almost always meant as ironic mockery of older people or, possibly, those who are uncomfortable with gay people and gay culture. I don't think I've ever heard this phrase used in an unironic way by anyone likely to be reading Gawker.

I've got to agree with you. It's an awkward-looking car. There was one at the Porsche club show at the Santa Monica airport last week and I spent 15 minutes just circling it, trying to reconcile the awesomeness inside with the not-quit-right outside. There were 60 years of Porsches there and it was the least

Scandinavia's not perfect, but it's damn close. I've got family in Norway and HJTravels' description isn't far from the truth in my experience. And my family are in rural Norway. In the US an equivalent area would be fully of poorly educated, unhealthy, slovenly people living shabbily (not everyone, but plenty).

Thank you for posting interesting on-topic videos that some people may have missed, even if it angers some commenters so much because of their inability to skip over things they're already familiar with.

This fellow did not ask himself "what is the outcome I'd like to see from my actions?" If he had, he would never have put his sexual whining into spreadsheet form. That has to be the least attractive way imaginable to convince your wife to be more interested in you. I want to slap this guy.

We'll have to wait and see if it will result in real improvements or just better marketing. For as good as the ATS and CTS are, there's still plenty of room for improvement.

This will certainly lower the value of CPO BMWs in the marketplace if the warranty is no longer a fully transferrable part of the car.

It seems there are people who think that crimes committed on premises should not only be held against the criminal. The property of the landlord must be permanently devalued by the act. Presumably if someone was hurt on their property, they'd be happy to see their investment diminished.

It's like a zen koan: if nobody in Idaho is stupid enough to hand keys over to a valet, is he still a valet?

Wha? He doesn't have the right? Sure he does. Unless you're going to give up the "right" to pass judgement on every single idiotic thing that happens outside of the US.

People certainly won't be watching Ferrari win that way, or any other, this season.

There's certainly no such thing as a Nintendo in my house this generation. Not gonna get fooled again.

Women just don't have the upper body strength to compete with men in Hearthstone.

Who are you to judge how we mourn the passing of this young man? It may sound like hilarious laughter, but it's all sobbing and tears on the inside.

Given that the process of hailing an Uber cab leaves a digital trail and that there are likely two trackable devices tied to that transaction, doesn't it actually seem that kidnapping is less likely than in a conventional cab, where there is usually no detailed logging of a street-hailed, cash transaction between the

The thing that keeps cab licenses high is the limited number available. In cities like New York, the medallions are exchangeable commodities and the sky-high price is determined by the market. But you're right that the city essentially does a favor for current medallion-holders by artificially restricting the supply

Is there any significance to this at all other than Polyphony paid for the relationship? If track accuracy were the deciding factor, then there are plenty of racing sims that should be in line ahead of a console racer. Unless this is just the FIA award for most Skylined racing game ever, in which case carry on.

I just watched it again and it still looks like she's ramming it around :20 right before the camera points away from the road. The truck does brake, but I don't see reverse lights on. It certainly doesn't seem like the truck created an unavoidable situation.

That report plus an insurance policy will sort the problem out. What this doctor will not be getting is a payment from the insurance company for his car after this. Getting all Texas on the thieves in this case will probably end up costing him much more than the deductible on whatever was stolen during the burglary.