Wait a minute…who does this post-Soviet, asexual troll think he’s talking about?
Krugabe’s role is to be the perpetual bitch to my Maximum Dom.
Its little shit-weasels like him are why I no longer accept payment in checks.
Here’s one sans the paywall, this is the only free service I provide.
The next few months are going to be incredibly grim. The pandemic is exploding, but Donald Trump is tweeting while America burns. His officials, unwilling to admit that he lost the election, are refusing even to share coronavirus data with the Biden team.
The data is publicly available, dumbass.
As a result, many preventable deaths will occur before a vaccine’s widespread distribution. And the economy will take a hit, too; travel is declining, an early indicator of a slowdown in job growth and possibly even a return to job losses as virus fears cause consumers to hunker down again.
But a vaccine is coming. Nobody is sure which of the promising candidates will prevail, or when they’ll be widely available. But it’s a good guess that we’ll get this pandemic under control at some point next year.
And it’s also a good bet that when we do, the economy will come roaring back.
OK, this is not the consensus view. Most economic forecasters appear to be quite pessimistic; they expect a long, sluggish recovery that will take years to bring us back to anything resembling full employment. They worry a lot about long-term “scarring” from unemployment and closed businesses. And they could be right.
They are right. According to the credentialed gubbmint elitists you beat off to at the US Small Business Administration, small businesses account for 44% of the US economy in 2019. A sizeable majority of these likely closed permanently, but we may never know how much wealth was flushed like an old tampon on a Wednesday morning.
…and its cowardly, mainstream “listen to the scientists and nobody else” fucks like YOU that lead the way.
But my sense is that many analysts have overlearned the lessons from the 2008 financial crisis, which was indeed followed by years of depressed employment, defying the predictions of economists who expected the kind of “V-shaped” recovery the economy experienced after earlier deep slumps. For what it’s worth, I was among those who dissented back then, arguing that this was a different kind of recession, and that recovery would take a long time.
And here’s the thing: The same logic that predicted sluggish recovery from the last big slump points to a much faster recovery this time around — again, once the pandemic is under control.
No…they didn’t learn anything other than print more worthless money. At least this time the respective team cuck and team cunt bases incentivized politicians not working with the other side.
What held recovery back after 2008? Most obviously, the bursting of the housing bubble left households with high levels of debt and greatly weakened balance sheets that took years to recover.
This time, however, households entered the pandemic slump with much lower debt. Net worth took a brief hit but quickly recovered. And there’s probably a lot of pent-up demand: Americans who remained employed did a huge amount of saving in quarantine, accumulating a lot of liquid assets.
All of this suggests to me that spending will surge once the pandemic subsides and people feel safe to go out and about, just as spending surged in 1982 when the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates. And this in turn suggests that Joe Biden will eventually preside over a soaring, “morning in America”-type recovery.
Which brings me to the politics. How should Biden play the good economic news if and when it comes?
First of all, he should celebrate it. I don’t expect Biden to engage in Trump-like boasting; he’s not that kind of guy, and his economics team will be composed of people who care about their professional reputations, not the quacks and hacks who populate the current administration. But he can highlight the good news, and point out how it refutes claims that progressive policies somehow prevent prosperity.
Nobody wants to hear good news, asshole. They want their fear mongering served high with a twist, to get them prepared for the two minutes of hate.
Also, Biden and his surrogates shouldn’t hesitate to call out Republicans, both in Washington and in state governments, when they try to sabotage the economy — which, of course, they will. I won’t even be surprised if we see GOP efforts to impede the wide distribution of a vaccine.
What, do you think there are some lines a party refusing to cooperate with the incoming administration — and, in fact, still trying to steal the election — won’t cross?
He says with a straight face while this totalitarian narcissist is literally getting in the way of vaccine distribution—even before the vaccine was approved by the FDA.
Finally, while Biden should make the most of good economic news, he should try to build on success, not rest on his laurels. Short-term booms are no guarantee of longer-term prosperity. Despite the rapid recovery of 1982-1984, the typical American worker earned less, adjusted for inflation, at the end of Reagan’s presidency in 1989 than in 1979.
Gee…How did that happen?
And while I’m optimistic about the immediate outlook for a post-vaccine economy, we’ll still need to invest on a large scale to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure, improve the condition of America’s families (especially children) and, above all, head off catastrophic climate change.
So even if I’m right about the prospects for a Biden boom, the political benefits of that boom shouldn’t be cause for complacency; they should be harnessed in the service of fixing America for the long run.
And the fact that Biden may be able to do that is reason for hope.
Team cuck currently has 50 senators, even if the Georgia runoffs both go to team cunt your optimism doesn’t account for the existence of Joe Manchin.
Have fun getting the team cunt version of Mick Romney to vote on anything remotely appearing to kill local industry to his inbred, retard base.
Those of us worried about the future were relieved to see Trump defeated (even though it’s possible he’ll have to be removed forcibly from the White House), but bitterly disappointed by the failure of the expected blue wave to materialize down-ballot.
Funny, that.
If I’m right, however, the peculiar nature of the coronavirus slump may give Democrats another big political opportunity. There’s a pretty good chance that they’ll be able to run in the 2022 midterms as the party that brought the nation and the economy back from the depths of COVID despond. And they should seize that opportunity, not just for their own sake, but for the sake of the nation and the world.
Grandpa hand-job ran on more lockdowns, deceptive tax plans, energy policies that completely ignore basic knowledge of thermodynamics, god knows what on fracking, and printing more money out of thin air.
It might even be enough economic castration that vapid elitists like you won’t be able to afford their vegan salmon.
Isn’t this a bit early in the day for this? Shouldn’t these be post-watershed articles?
What’s funny about that WTFhappenedin71 bit is they treat the whole post-WWII era as though THAT WAS FUCKING NORMAL.
Sure, a world in which this country had undergone a massive mobilization and war effort, and was the only functioning industrial economy in the world. Yeah, that’s just totally normal – we should ALWAYS use 1947 as the baseline of our index.
Obviously, we can’t learn anything from the 1920s except that only FDR and the New Deal could save us from the consequences.
There’s also a fuckton of structural changes to the government-economy relationship that happened in the 1960s and 1970s, only some of which got walked back in the 1980s and 1990s, which have shaped the picture since. Funny enough, those changes seem to have led to an improvement in compensation relative to productivity, such that if you used 1990 as your baseline instead of 1947, the picture would be not nearly as bleak.
This is the guy who said the stock market would never recover from Trump’s election in 2016. He’s totally believable.
I don’t know how Winston’s Mom manages to read Krugman on a regular basis.
Apropos on a vaccine, read Ozy’s book. I linked the paperback version in case Amazon decides the book is doubleungood. Or you could go to Smashwords.
Reading that byline…a Ding!
If the filth she willingly puts herself through wasn’t enough it at partially immunize her from Krugnutz then nothing would. Not a training arc for the faint of heart or those with a weak gag reflex that’s for sure.
You’ll be singing a different tune when he crams a couple Trillion Dollar coins in in your cooch!
That’s terrible. What the hell is wrong with you?
When I think of good faith, I think of Paul Krugman.
The Dem attacks on Trump over the last four years – not at all ludicrous!
…and made completely in good faith!
Oh, Paulie – we know better than to ever believe you or the NYT operates on the basis of good faith.
bitterly disappointed by the failure of the expected blue wave to materialize down-ballot
Such delicious tears.
Won’t prevent their acting as though they earned a mandate, along with a good many Republicans.
I honestly want to bitchslap any person claiming a mandate.
It’s a womxndate?
Democrats win by even the slightest of margins is a mandate. Republicans win by any margin and they aren’t allowed or are unwilling to govern.
There is one, and only one, mandate upon which Republicans govern – the cutting of taxes. Is that really the only thing they can agree on?
Not even that. Capping the SALT deduction was a straight-up tax increase, and while the other changes to the personal income tax code lowered tax rates for most, the shifting of cutoff thresholds actually raised some people’s taxes by a little bit. As far as I can tell, the sole purpose of the GOP today is to continue implementing the Democrats’ old platform. They’re 10-20 years behind the curve, but otherwise have no consistent positions.
How that deduction was ever a thing to begin with baffles my mind.
NYers: Waaah! Our state taxes are too high! I know, instead of reducing our state taxes, let’s shift some of our Federal tax burden onto other state residents! That’s the absolute fairest way to do things!
I’ve got mixed feelings on it. I see it as you say it, but I also see it as allowing for the proper role of state and local government as more potent than the Federal government in people’s day-to-day lives. But then again I also think our income taxes at the Federal level are way too high and just encourage redistribution and cronyism.
Poll results show tight races between candidates in U.S. Senate runoffs
Looks like the poll manipulation is going strong.
Also fuck Georgia for having the most idiotic election laws.
The GOP used to be the Stupid Party but I think they’re working very hard to become the Irrelevant Party.
+2 bites at the peach
Actually, it is good to not have plurality winners, IMO, it should just be instant runoff, which Maine has implemented.
Will the Jan. 5th vote be “in person” or “mail in?” I think which it is will matter.
Both and if you move to Georgia before the election you can register and vote in the election. All you need to register is proof of a Georgia address. They say it’s illegal to move to Georgia with intent to vote. But how the hell you going to identify those cases?
The devil went down to Georgia lookin’ for an election to steal…
Prediction: Dems win both.
No prediction on fraud.
Just two days ago I read the Republicans were favored 80%.
That asshole Lin Wood should not be discouraging voting.
Well, see, in the age of Trump there are no fair elections.
Know who else knocked on doors in Belgium?
Belgian Police Will Knock on Doors at Christmas to Enforce Coronavirus Rules
I did at one point.
Erich Ludendorff?
Marc Dutroux?
They worry a lot about long-term “scarring” from unemployment and closed businesses. And they could be right.
Oh, pshaw! As soon as he gets the high sign from Foochy, Ballgag Joe will flip the switch marked “Plenty” and a chicken will magically appear in every pot.
After the Great Reset meat/poultry will only be a delicacy, not a staple, comrade.
Sowell makes that point about all of the income inequality worriers – they just assume economic production and prosperity exist and the great problem is how to share the rewards. You can never get them to peel back that assumption.
Eww, Matt Yglesias is on Rogan today.
I guess I’ll give it a listen, see if I can make it through the entire thing.
Sadbeard is somehow more tolerable than his former compatriot Klein, who is in the running for biggest shithead of the decade.
On a thread about Krugman, I’d say no one else is in the running for being the biggest shithead of the decade.
And while I’m optimistic about the immediate outlook for a post-vaccine economy, we’ll still need to invest on a large scale to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure, improve the condition of America’s families (especially children) and, above all, head off catastrophic climate change.
Good boy. Here’s a piece of cake for reciting your catechism.
Why would be simultaneously “rebuild our crumbling infrastructure” i.e. roads and bridges while also telling people not to use said roads or bridges? Make-work projects FTW!
https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2020/12/portlands-custer-park-will-get-new-name-its-called-a-park-for-now.html
Custer gets scalped by the savages for the second time.
Next to the park you will find A Building. In front of the building you will find A Pond. Across A Street you will see A Stadium. A Stadium is home to A Team.
Lies! I went there, and it wasn’t the A-Team at all!
How did you manage to find them?
Well, this guy in yellowface talked around the issue for a while…
Let the healing begin.
Given the extraordinary nature of the lockdown proponents’ proposition, one would expect the media, which plays the crucial role of intermediary between government officials and the public, to subject this idea to intense scrutiny.
Take a seat, Shirley. There’s something you need to know.
they just assume economic production and prosperity exist and the great problem is how to share the rewards. You can never get them to peel back that assumption.
There’s this hat, see, and it’s MAGIC! Anything you want, you just pluck it out of the magic hat.
Thomas Sowell wrote a bit, more eloquently than I can paraphrase, in one of his books about how “distribution of income” is thought of by many as a process someone chooses to implement (distribute, v., to hand out, to assign) rather than a statistical observation (distribution, n., the observed frequency in a sample, or predicted probability in a population, of the occurrence of events). Lots of people do not seem to understand, or are unwilling to accept, that income does not and never truly can flow according to a central design.
Although it’s depressing, the most useful way to understand this perspective is to think about it from an evolutionary perspective. Through the overwhelming majority of its existence, mankind basically operated as tribal hunter-gatherers (“gamboling in the fields”). It’s not unreasonable to believe that, over that time, a wide swath of thinking got embedded into our cultures and “collective unconsciousness”. From the primitive, tribal, view, a “distribution of income” was precisely that. The hunting party split up the mastodon and assigned pieces of meat to the members of the tribe. The whole affair was overseen by a chief who was on top, at the pinnacle, of the tribe. Notions of markets or individualism or government as just one institution of society are, from humanity’s existence, relatively novel inventions. It’s not surprising that broad swaths of humanity don’t think in such terms.
That’s a bit ‘Just-So Story’ evo psych for my tastes. I mean, in the same vein, we have such evolutionary stories for individualism, self-ownership, and markets as well. It is a well known-fact that apes have been observed trading food for sex. The oldest profession, indeed! Monkeys were even taught the concept of currency as a store of value and medium of exchange, and one monkey ho quickly started trading capuchin ass for tokens.
You would bring that up in my thread. #returntomonkey
I stay on topic.
Thank you both, just for being who you are, whoever that might be.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnP5iDKwuwk
It is a well known-fact that apes have been observed trading food for sex
Eating ass is food AND sex!
Well, even tribes are just one stage in the chain. Something else came first. But yeah, I think there is a transitive property of trust that likely has some connection to a tribal mentality. Sure, I’ve never met such-and-such but he seems like a nice guy and he says things I like, so he must be one of the tribe, and he’s in charge, so he must be looking out for us.
Something else came first.
My impression is that the pack animal nature of primates goes way, way back. I don’t know how far back you would have to go to find our genetic ancestors that weren’t pack (or, I suppose, herd) animals. The tribe is just a pack of primates with a hierarchical social organization, much like just about any pack of animals. I don’t know if there are any social animals without some form of status ranking, which is basically what a hierarchical organization is.
The bit that I found interesting about evolutionary pysch in the feedback loop of culture driving selection and the further driving.
While tribalim is hardwired in us, so is trading for mutual benefit. I would hazzard a guess that the first members of our genus that mastered language figured out that trading was way easier and less risky than bashing ’em in the skull and taking thier stuff. (Thats what governments are for).
“to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure”
Our infrastructure’s been crumbling for so long, it’s a wonder there’s any left.
It’s designed tom crumble and be moldy, like blue cheese.
We really need a different design, and incentives for the stuff to last.
Does cost scale linearly with designed lifetime? If it’s worse than linear, then depending on the rate of inflation, it may actually be more cost-effective to build say a 50-year bridge and replace it every 50 years, than to build a bridge designed to last longer. Of course, that assumes the new bridge does actually get planned and built on time.
You’re on to something, as It also assumes people will continue to use the bridge.
I want it Ragnarok-Proof.
As a guy who drove across a bridge one morning, only to watch it collapse that same afternoon, let’s build for 51 and replace at 50.
Or 40.
Otherwise, I think you are spot on.
That’s why I ain’t goin’ over that Mackinac Bridge, the weather must be hell on bridges up here,
You missed that? Dayum…..
Is that when you decided to start losing weight?
Lol!
Honestly, I still get the heebies driving across the new bridge.
That was an interesting concrete pour.
They overloaded the mix with fly ash so that the concrete would not “kick” on its own during the pour. They then raised the temperature gradually with ground heaters until the concrete cured to specification.
There were a couple of reasons for doing so:
1) That massive of a concrete pour will typically run away on the curing reaction and overheat the structure to failure when using a typical mix. It will literally get hot enough to boil water during the “kick”
2) The fly ash actually cures to a higher compressive strength over the long term even though it retards the curing of the concrete.
There’s probably something not subject to the law of diminishing returns, but I have o idea what it is.
Winston’s Mom?
I worked with a guy that was born in Germany and grew up in Italy (German father, Italian mother).
He said he would drive newcomers around Rome and say “See that bridge, the Romans built it 2,000 years ago. We still use it. See that bridge, the Italians built it 15 years ago. It’s closed because it’s not safe to use.”
Everything made by mankind is temporary. They just have different timelines.
Just wait till they pass Net Neutrality rules and within five years they’re complaining that telecommunications infrastructure is crumbling, so we’d better nationalize it.
We must have bandwidth equity! A Brocade core router on every street, and a 100 gigabit fiber connection in every pot!
Actually, that would be equality. Equity would be more like, your allotted bandwidth is inversely proportional to your privilege. White hetero cis-males get 28.8 dial-up speeds (56K? who do you think you are?).
I’m betting they don’t care so long as they get to monitor traffic.
Using a VPN will be admission of thoughtcrime.
It already is. Many sites already block VPN traffic wholesale.
If the LEAD Act is passed, then online anonymity will not just be difficult, but illegal.
Obviously, that would encompass far more than just VPN traffic (i.e., IPSec or other tunneling tech), and would blow open the doors to even more targeted surveillance, as if a state snooper sees encrypted traffic, then that must be a criminal.
The scary thing about this act, too, is that it covers data at rest as much as it does data in motion. So, that encrypted hard drive may at some point become (1) illegal, and/or (2) have a built-in backdoor decrypt “feature”.
(should be LAED* Act)
Fuck. The Clipper Chip is back.
Really? I agree Scruffy – yet another Clipper Chip.
And there is no way access would be abused, right?
I’ve been told there is no such thing as capacity on the internet, it is all just greedy corporations trying to trick you into paying more.
Is whorefrost stripper glitter for northern climes?
Yes
Knew it.
Lots of people do not seem to understand, or are unwilling to accept, that income does not and never truly can flow according to a central design.
Yes. Just as they are incapable of comprehending a “market” as the aggregate end result of of millions (billions?) of discrete independently made decisions. You can’t make it run in reverse, no matter how hard you might wish it so.
The world is exactly like Sims/Civilization/Age of Empires/Anno/etc. It is known.
Sid Meier seems to be a closet capitalist. Though the game obviously is one big example of central planning, you generally perform better choosing freedom and capitalism than any of the alternatives.
As much as I love 4X, city builders, simulations, etc., I fear they have also done a lot of intellectual damage upon the generation that was raised by them.
If not for our benevolent magistrate we’d be overrun by Zerg.
Playing civilization as a kid sparked my interest in history and I didn’t grown-up to be a central planner. Now when I play Hearts of Iron I go fascist or communist… Because that makes the game fun.
This gets back to the primitive belief that someone or something is in charge. What do you mean “shit happens without a central authority ordering it about”? In the tribe, we have a chief – he is in charge. Beyond the tribe, we have a god – he is in charge. It is simply crazy talk to say that things can be accomplished without someone in charge of it. Jane Jacobs’ The Nature of Economies is wonderful for exactly this point – any economy is very much like an eco-system. And pretty much everyone should be able to understand that an eco-system is not the product of some central design.
Well, a strict creationist might say that. But central planning is pretty much to economics what strict creationism is to the natural world, so the comparison works.
And pretty much everyone should be able to understand that an eco-system is not the product of some central design.
States literally manage ecosystems through their game and fish departments. Not that I am advocating they continue to do so.
They attempt to manage. Then when wolves start eating livestock and pets, thousands of cars are wrecked by hitting deer and the duck migratory flyway shifts hundreds of miles west, they realize the folly of their efforts.
Then double down.
Before the Derecho took out half the trees in the nearby town, it had wonderful green belts threaded through town. That meant lots of deer in town too. So the city council finally hired people to thin the herds by hunting with archery (still no hunting with guns inside city limits).
I suggested to several people we just needed to reintroduce the grey wolf into these green belts. They would keep the deer population in check and probably reduce the homeless population as well. Two for One deal!
They looked at me like I was a monster. Such is the life of the well-meaning engineer.
You probably know this already, but I find it fascinating still.
How wolves change rivers
Allow kids in Children’s Services custody to be raised by wolves. They’d probably turn out better-socialized.
I’ll say it – it was an elegant solution.
Thanks.
Have you tried “kill all the poor”?
When the deer in southern Wisconsin got chronic wasting disease, the thought was that it was because there were so many of them that they could transmit it to each other. The DNR decided to thin the herd by essentially declaring open season on antlerless deer – you could shoot as many as you wanted.
And lo, there was a great harvest of deer. When the DNR did their survey of deer populations in southern Wisconsin, they discovered that we had basically subtracted that year’s fawn crop from the overall herd. The deer population as a whole was only marginally affected. And after another year, was back to what it had been before it had been “managed”.
Now you are qualified to manage walleyes in Mille Lacs.
Sparkling clear water but not many fish. Needs some exotic invasions. Put Hmongs in charge and some things would change.
https://pruned.blogspot.com/2011/02/bomb-crater-fish-ponds.html
And are frequently bad at it.
Less “manage” and more “poke around at.”
Sounds like the last time I made a house call with Drake.
The customer is always right!
Hopefully it turns out well. I think the logo looks good in yellow
Dude. I must have one of these. Are you going through Techwear?
Yup.
That would make a great hockey jersey.
Make the yellow blaze orange and I just found my new upland bird hunting vest!
I still blame going off of the Bretton Woods system in 1971.
Show me real evidence damnit!!
https://hannity.com/media-room/breaking-now-surveillance-footage-shows-atlanta-workers-scanning-ballots-from-suitcase-after-hours/
Show me the Gilmore!
https://rumble.com/vbkkd1-suitcases-of-ballots-pulled-from-under-table-after-poll-watchers-were-told-.html?mref=23gga&mc=8uxj1
In a nation with rule of law, everyone in that room would be getting frog-marched into a holding cell right now.
nO eVuHdEnSe!!
I’m OK with call this treason and letting the Feds take this to it’s logical outcome.
I think it can only be treason if it falls under “adhering to their enemies”, as in with knowledge and support by a foreign actor. China comes to mind. *adjust tinfoil*
logical outcome
The FBI slow walks the investigation for three or four years, then drops it?
boo-yah
That is all well and good but where is your evidence? Also, an OAN report? *scoff* Enough with your conservative propaganda, Trumpster.
https://twitter.com/Cernovich/status/1334573183958020096
“I don’t believe voter fraud exists in America.”
-Facederp acquaintance
But Russian influence and “lies from the right” on FB totally got Trump elected.
Make him a bet the loser has to wear one of these:
https://www.etsy.com/market/tail_butt_plug
Then show him the video.
Fucking furries, I swear…
You are friends with Ron Bailey on Facestupid?
It can’t be what it looks like.
*facepalm*
My wife was giving me an ass chewing not an hour ago because I am so cynical.
She had no answer when I responded “Maybe I am, but I am usually right, aren’t I?”
It wasn’t enough to change the outcome….except that it did.
And unlike what someone said they heard – this is real, physical evidence.
Nixon was the worst president of my lifetime, though I was an infant at the time. Considering how bad the presidents have been…
You fell asleep in 2008 and didn’t wake up until 2016?
My personal choice for “worst president in living memory” is LBJ.
Tie between George W who lied us into war and Carter who was/is a good man for a pol but was a terrible president.
I am trying to think of a good response to make my case for O’bumbles but…..y’all are right . They are all fuckers that I wouldn’t put in charge of picking up dog shit in my back yard. I despise them all.
Slow your roll, Calamity Jane. I happen to think that nearly every ex-pol (not only presidents) is suited only to dog-shit collection.
Pretty much there with ya Suthen.
Easily LBJ and that’s with very stiff competition.
Completely corrupt, probably had Kennedy assassinated, known election rigger, gave us the Great Society…
So you’re saying Joe is over halfway to the top already and he hasn’t even been coordinated. No wonder there was so much enthusiasm for him.
Coronated autocorrect coronated.
Back at TOS, I created a campaign slogan for Obama — Obama: Dumber than Carter; Dirtier than Nixon.
That should imply my ranking of worst presidents of my life time.
Nixon was worse in that he somehow combined all the Republican bad with all the Democrat bad and then poured ridiculous levels of corruption and arrogance on top of it. Obama only had a little of the “Republican bad” on him and was corrupt, but not Nixon levels of corrupt.
And I was not alive for LBJ (though I don’t remember Nixon. I have a vague memory of the Carter v Ford election).
Nixon was awful policywise, but he was a rank amatuer at corruption which is why he got caught and became the poster child for it.
Is there such a thing as a good presiden
*President?
Coolidge!
I was born during the Johnson Administration, lived through the mess that Carter made, believed HW when he said “read my lips”, W’s senseless wars, Obama’s fecklessness… it’s a tough call.
In my life Reagan was the best President, Trump a distant second. After that, they all sucked. Maybe Ford at #3 because he didn’t do much.
Want to see what happens when you panic and push the accelerator to the floor instead of the brake?
Originally priced starting at a bit of $100k you may be able to get deal on this example.
That’ll buff out. You’ll never even know it.
That there is (was) a purdy automoble.
You know the difference between a Porche and a porcupine?
The Porche has the prick on the inside.
How is a ricer like a tampon?
Both are always near a pussy.
I’ve always wanted an air cooled 911, but considering the prices that’s never going to happen.
I hate what modern cars have become. Gadgets and a bunch of emissions and electronic nannies that impact reliability and any sense of “fun”.
Thats why I have a 1992 Camaro RS. (350 TPI swapped in). It still has some of the fancy engine doodads but it is still pretty easy to turn wrenches on and parts are dirt cheap, for the most part. While they are notoriously anemic, power wise, you can beef them up without breaking the bank. Imma gonna build a 383 stroker and drop it in there
Somebody’s always Taycan things too far…
Porches are the official car of ’80’s movie antagonists. That or a Third Generation Camaro/Firebird.
Obviously caused by the stroke that occurred when the new owner realized how much money they just spent.
A decent, quick, read, compliments of Hillsdale College.
A Sensible and Compassionate Anti-COVID Strategy
More PPP loan fun. Per our company’s accounting firm, the IRS is considering PPP loans as taxable income. Apparently the IRS won’t take congress’s word that it was not supposed to be. I’m not surprised that congress is incapable of writing a bill properly.