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03-26-2006, 02:14 PM | #1 |
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Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
Just saw the argument that buying from domestic auto manufacturers keeps more Americans employed in a thread.
True? False? Considerations? I believe wholehartedly that attitude is why Ford/GM are in massive trouble right now. US consumers have allowed the domestic auto manufacturers to produce junk for the past 20 years, all the while, the import manufacturers have increased quality by leaps and bounds. Ford and GM relied on the "US consumers will buy whatever we sell them because of patriotism" concept because it was partially true. I look at the domestic Focus and it's European counterpart. Night and day difference in quality. While the US Focus spent about 1/2 it's usable life in the garage having recalls performed, the Euro Focus didn't have the same issues. Why? While foreign manufacturers from Asia and Europe have moved many large scale production efforts to the United States, domestic manufacturers have moved more and more out of the country to Mexico. Ford's looking to close down dozens of US plants in order to increase profitability, and they will likely follow suit with the airline companies and sue to erase pensions that their employees were basing retirement on. GM is in the same boat. How many years has it been now that the US auto makers have completely ignored the real problem? That they build junk compared to a lot of foreign makers? How many model names has Ford dumped because they had such a bad reputation that the cars could no longer be sold? Tempo, Escort, Contour, Probe, Taurus, etc. I have my doubts that the Focus nameplate will remain around much longer. Have they learned? No. Will they learn? My guess is that at least one of the domestics will fold or nearly fold before they might be able to turn things around. We'll have to see how the latest generation of vehicles looks 3-5 years from now. Unfortunately, that may be too late at this point. The bottom line for me? I'm not going to buy junk, just because a US manufacturer built it, albeit they probably shipped the actual manufacturing to Mexico anyway. I can buy a made in the USA car from Honda, Toyota, BMW, Daimler Chrysler, Hyundai, etc. A car that was actually built here. While I realize the executives and a lot of the money for the sale of the cars built by foreign owned manufacturers goes overseas to their corporate offices, their CEO's on average make at least 10x LESS than their American CEO counterparts. US auto makers have screwed their consumers and workers, and tarnished the reputation of the "Made in the USA" slogan domestically all while lavishing huge pay increases onto the executives. The only reason they've been able to do so is because they were able to take advantage of the pride and patriotism in this country. |
03-26-2006, 05:59 PM | #2 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
I can't add all that much to your trenchant but accurate observations, Kell, but I'll try anyway .
While here and there, some U.S. models perform well and are not unreliable, on the whole, the quality of most U.S. automakers is poor when compared to Asian cars. Now, not everything 'foreign' is automatically good. German cars, for all their crowing ads about "fine German engineering" are notorious for poor reliability and high repair costs. I have a friend with over 20 years in the auto sales and auto repair business and he says that German cars (Audi is the worst) and Chrysler Corporation cars are nightmares in regards to repair work. Don't even think about buying one of those cute Chrysler Sebring convertibles. He claims they are a headache and won't even buy them at auction to re-sell because of customer complaints after the sale. So it goes. While I had a splendid experience with my '90 Mustang, that was an already-proven body and drivetrain and I maintained it well. I found the build quality to be excellent, for the most part. Good for me, but I know many late-model Mustang owners are not as sanguine about their Mustangs quality and that would make me hesitate to dump some 25 G's into a new one, no matter how high the HP rating or how sweet the exhaust sounds. As you know, I bought a new Honda Civic last year and have had zero problems wih it, except for a slow-to-rise driver-side window (when it was very cold out) which Honda repaired by replacing the window regulator, under warranty (and gave me a free '05 loaner while they did it). The build quality on the Civic is excellent. It was manufactured in Canada and only the automatic transmission is from Japan, for what that's worth. Unlike some American cars, the Honda Civic will hold about 60% of it's original cost over five years, which is fantastic. Frankly, even with the lack of real performance, the Civic is mostly pleasant to drive, if not exciting. The current financial plight of the Big Three U.S. automakers is mostly a product of their own making, along with a terrible lack of foresight on their part. It isn't just obscene executive salaries, inflated worker costs or any other whipping boy the media comes up with. All of those add up, of course, but your original point remains valid: it's the lack of quality. A new car is a huge investment and people get mightily P.O''ed when that expensive new car breaks down and then turns out to have a crappy re-sale value, later. A buyer feels screwed over and resents it, big-time. When the Japanese (and other foreign manufacturers) presented a viable alternative, they went for it. 20 years ago I never would have even considered buying a Japanese car, economical or otherwise, Today, I own one, and not only that...I like it. Not because of advertising or any need to follow the herd but because they have been proven to be a solid value and worth the money, if that is the kind of car what you want. U.S. cars don't compete successfully with them, even as they keep trying. Your observations of the long string of failed Ford car models is a sad but all-too true example of the inability of U.S. manufacturers to do what's needed. I have discussed this with that car dealer/mechanic friend and he believes that the bloated U.S. auto manufacturers have such high overhead, from real estate costs, to federal, state and local taxes, to high employee salary and benefits (including the executives) that they have to cut corners to make a profit that will attract investors. Well, if that's the case, it ain't workin'.
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03-26-2006, 07:59 PM | #3 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
US manufacturers don't need to cut corners, and their sale prices are often proof. Their die hard old marketing campaign features cars that undercut the competition in price. They hope the cheaper vehicle will get buyers to jump at their model line rather than spending more for a foreign car.
Hyundai and Kia can point to the fact that sales practice works.... but the car people are buying MUST be of nearly the same quality. While it's true that some domestic cars do quite well in terms of reliability, they do little to enhance the overall image. Even the some cars are good, some cars are bad reputation serves to provide an poor image of vehicles manufactured overall. It implies sloppy engineering and quality control. If Ford could build a 5.0 Mustang which was very reliable, why were their other cars such junk? There's no good reason for it because they proved they could build a good car. They just didn't want to. Cutting corners isn't an option anymore. If the domestics want to remain viable, neither is undercutting the competition with lower prices until their quality reputation is restored. It's true that a lot of German manufactured cars have poor reliability despite the "German Engineering" catch phrase. The Volkswagen/Audi 1.8T is the epitome of a piece of engineering junk. While powerful, smooth and refined, it grenades at 60k-80k with alarming regularity. The cause? A poorly designed/constructed timing belt on an interference engine. It's a well documented problem, but I don't believe they've ever taken care of the issue. Volkswagen is pretty hit or miss it seems. I've talked to a lot of people that have never really had a problem, and some that have had lots of problems. Regardless, I see a TON of high mileage German cars commanding a LOT of money in the used car market. I think most of it has to do with the driving experience behind the wheel. I know I was very impressed with my little brother's Jetta. He has an '01 Jetta, nothing special. It felt 10x nicer and newer than my brand new '02 GT though. There are, of course, other problems besides just quality with Ford/GM. Marketing. How bad are the Ford commercials we all see? Oh man. They're awful, awful, awful. The music and the car names. Minor styling mishaps flattened out (new edge) quarter panels on the now defunct Cougar. With just a touch more work on the quality of the Cougar (it doesn't seem to have major issues, just a lot of minor ones) and some better advertising, it would have been a huge hit for Mercury. Anyway, I digress. If the domestic manufacturers are doing poorly, and they need to cut costs, the very first place they need to look at is the executives. They claim the right to huge pay when the company does well so they should take the blame when the company does poorly. |
03-27-2006, 04:26 PM | #4 | |||||||
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Quality: the '800 pound gorilla' in the auto showroom
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While I've always felt that one or two individual accounts of good or bad experiences with a specific car doesn't mean all that much, I have to note that a friend owned a late '90's BMW that began falling apart at 100,000 miles but he was reluctent to let it go because of the 'feel' of the car and the 'prestige' it gave him. It was 'his Beemer' and his ownership inferred a status to him that he valued over practical aspects. He finally gave in and sold it when a head gasket went and the estimated repair bill was in the thousands. He now drives a late-model Jeep SUV. Go figure. Quote:
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I think we can agree that when we talk of auto sales and why the domestics are sliding ever-downward, the 'quality issue' is the 800-pound gorilla in the middle of the room that the U.S. automakers are basically trying to avoid seeing, even if more and more American car buyers, do. I don't know if anyone else here is really interested in this issue, but I appreciate the dialogue and the opportunity to express my views, for whatever they are worth to anyone.
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03-27-2006, 11:33 PM | #5 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
I'm absolutely loving this thread! The whole matter of the fact is that the executives are making WAAAYYY too much and less attention is going towards the product(as with most US corporations). Well, that's conservative capitalism, isn't it. Whatever the market will bear, make as much as you can. Capitalism absolutely gives people motivation to work harder while giving others a license to steal. Its not right and could be the downfall of America. It's all about the profit, which is what I despise about the extreme right wing(giving everything I've worked so hard to obtain away to the lazy is what I despise about the extreme left wing). Let's be accountable for our products. I have a 2004 Ford and a 2002 Chevy sitting in my driveway right now.. Chevy gives better customer service, hands down. I don't even want to deal with Ford anymore, seriously. Their customer service is crap, total crap. They absolutely don't care about your problems while GM gives you a rental while your car is in the shop. This isn't just locally either, its everywhere I've taken my cars. The Mercury dealership(locally) is better than most though. I don't even want to talk about Dodge, though they have some vehicles that appeal to me.. I'll never own another Dodge.
I say put more attention towards the product and cut back on the excessive pay. While we're at it.. lets put more farmers to work and grow corn to make ethanol fuel. Why keep paying the outrageous prices for oil, we don't need it but... someone is making a dollar off it so let's capitalize on it! Right? WRONG! We don't need it! America has more natural gas than it knows what to do with yet we keep using oil... why?? SOMEONE IS MAKING A DOLLAR OFF OF IT! A car can run off of nature gas can't it.. YES! I say more ethanol, more solar, more wind. Heat houses with natural gas. We don't need all the oil we use but we keep using it.. WHY? Because someone(BUSH/CHENEY/SAUDI) is making a killing off of it. Absolutely ridiculous!(And some wonder why I despise the illiterate self serving president). |
03-27-2006, 11:53 PM | #6 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
I'm so tired of hearing GWB is the issue. A constant scapegoat for people that don't understand what they're talking about, "blame W" is the final reason why everything in this country is bad.
I'm not even going to dignify that catchphrase mentality with a more detailed response. |
03-28-2006, 12:34 AM | #7 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
I'm not blaming GWB for everything but to deny that he (and his sidekick) is the reason for the price of gas/oil shows your mentality and which side of the fence you stand on. If you want to applaud his Harvard education... damn, you hear the same speeches I hear. Standing there laughing at criticism because he doesn't know what else to do. What a joke.
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03-28-2006, 02:41 PM | #8 | |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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03-28-2006, 04:29 PM | #9 | |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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Rev
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03-28-2006, 05:46 PM | #10 | |||||
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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Capitalism is the engine that has made America the world power it is and has been since WWII. It allows anyone to start a small business and with hard work and some luck, be financially successful. Almost every big corporation in America - from Ford to Microsoft - were started by an entrepreneur with just an idea and lots of ambition. Those entrepreneurs - from the guy who owns the local auto repair shop down the road to the millionaire factory owner - hire and pay other people looking for work and thus, make the economy grow, as ours has, in stark comparison with europe and other western nations that have foolishly embraced socialism. These entrepreneurs often start by borrowing money from banks to start their business. Money that they pay back with interest, just as people have always done. Even the bible mentions bankers..and they are not condemned. Meanwhile, wage-earners choose to work for their wages and I don't think that $60,000. per-year auto workers are all that deprived. To mindlessly state, as you did, that 'capitalism could be the downfall of America' is beyond ridiculous and speaks to a profound lack of understanding of economics on your part. Grumbling about executive salaries is nothing new but it has little bearing on the financial woes of domestic automakers. While the six and seven-figure salaries of top auto execs may look bloated to the average person (you and me) , they simply mirror what other high-level execs get in other industries. I hardly think that the salaries, no matter how large, of a few dozen top-rank auto executives working in a multi-billion-dollar industry is the reason Ford and GM are sinking. As Kell and I have noted, the lack of quality in many U.S. automobiles and resulting sales drop-off is a large part of the reason for their slide in the market. Quote:
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Here's a clue: it's not just cars but homes, business and many kinds of machinery that are designed to run on oil or oil byproducts, as they have for over 100 years. They cannot be 'converted' overnight and the conversion costs would be huge, so no one is jumping into it without real proof that the so-called 'alternative fuels' are actually feasible in the long term. Solar? Wind power? How very PC....and how equally devoid of reality. Your anti-capitalism, anti-business and trite anti-Bush hysteria demonstrates the Marxist, anti-capitalist mindset that apparently drives 'liberals' these days and it is not pretty to watch, as your uninformed rantings here prove. Grow up and get real.
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03-28-2006, 06:00 PM | #11 | ||
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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As for President Bush 'laughing at criticism'....what would you have him do? Engage in shouting, name-calling arguments with reporters badgering him with accusations disguised as 'questions'? The president has to maintain a level of decorum others do not and all presidents laugh off criticism - because they have to.
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03-28-2006, 06:52 PM | #12 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
Alternative fuel prices ebb and flow. It is possible to gain or lose as the pendulum swings. That applies to any energy producing commodity. Companies that capitalize on these ebbs and flows are not inherently evil or good.
Capitalism allows the judgement of energy companies to make a profit from good prognostications or losses from poor predictions. Why not? I don't think the world can be hoodwinked for very long on the true value of energy fuels. I'm all for efficient use of fuels to supply energy. Let's just keep our perspective. Rev
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03-28-2006, 10:37 PM | #13 | |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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03-29-2006, 12:11 AM | #14 | ||
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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Anyway, back the subject, which is NOT George W Bush, Capitalism or Executive Compensation directly. Interesting article regarding a new Ford Motor Company executive bonus calculation. I feel the revised bonus adjustment due to repairs is a step in the right direction. It should help Ford execs focus on the quality issue, and it's a nearly direct admission that the cars Ford is producing are not as good as they should be. Quote:
That being said, an article from last year focusing on shortfalls in pension funding and executive pay indicates that Ford is one of the worst (this is a subjective assumption) based on the $12.3 Billion in unfunded pension money. Article On CEO/Executive Pay vs Pension Shortfalls Despite Bill Ford refusing salary, he apparently made more money than his counterpart CEO at GM due to the overall compensation package. Keep in mind, the executive pay numbers are for the top 5 executives in the company only. If those were the compensation numbers for the entire VP or higher employee group, it would be dirt cheap. Even so, when placed next to the deficiency in the pension, the $105M is only 0.9% of the deficiency. According to Ford Motor Company, Bill Ford donated all of his compensation (including stock options/bonuses) to charity this past year. Hopefully it made for a good write off. When your company is in the red, it might be a good time to think about spending money more wisely, no matter how noble the appearance is. |
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03-29-2006, 05:23 PM | #15 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
So, Bill Ford gives his salary to charity but that is considered just 'a write off'? The guy can't win! What would you have him do? Commit Hari Kari? Would that help Ford recover it's market share? Let's face it, the 'workers' are always going to resent the 'boss', especially when the boss got his job because of his lineage and in Bill Ford's case, (just like George W. Bush) nothing he does will please some folks.
It's become obvious that many of us love to point fingers at what we consider excessive, unjustified executive compensation and howl about it to no end. However, in the greater scheme of things, it is NOT the main reason for Ford or GM's falling stock and market share. While executive compensation is a valid enough point to discuss, this penchant to harp on it seems petty and unproductive. I suspect that under the patina of concern for the car companies continued viability that is often expressed as the rationale for the complaints, it often comes down to envy, more than anything else. The article Unit 5302 linked, as he noted in his comments, states that Ford executive pay amounted to only a fraction (9%) of the workers pension fund shortfall. It seems clear that when a company is bleeding money, it's easier to cut pension fund payments, which are a future obligation, than to suddenly stop or drastically reduce executive compensation that is an immediate obligation. It's like losing your job and stopping your savings account deposits but making your car payment. One can be deferred but the other cannot, at least, not without unpleasant consequences. The cold hard fact is that well-educated, experienced top-level executives...in any business...have now and always will be well-compensated. That means hundreds of thousands or even millions in annual compensation. To make comparisons to their salary and that of floor workers (in the auto industry) and then pretend this is a horrible crime and so on, is simply ridiculous, in my view. I can agree that execs drawing huge compensation packages while the product is shoddy, company sales are laying an egg in the face of tough competition and the company stock is rated 'junk' is cause for questioning. However, I also feel that high executive pay is an easy and sometimes misguided target of stockholder and public wrath. It's clear that adjustments will be made at Ford and GM but I can tell you - with confidence - that shop floor workers at those companies will not be making one-tenth of what the top execs will be making, no matter what happens. That is simply the way of the business world. If Ford or GM actually did drastically reduce executive compensation, they would quickly see a mass exodus of most of those executives - and not all of them are as worthless as some may wish to believe. Ford, GM or any other car manufacturer won't risk that kind of loss just to appease those who see anyone in the executive suite making ten times what a riveter makes as evil. So, we end up with failing U.S. car companies, shortchanged workers and executives being pilloried for making big bucks in the face of company disasters. Not a pretty picture. Lots of villains, lots of folks to point fingers at, including those assemblers who some want to see as noble, who did their part over the years to turn out poorly made cars while demanding fat salaries of their own, along with fat pensions. Somehow, they are held blameless while the execs, many of whom had/have little to do with quality issues, are castigated as rapacious and immoral, something right out of a 19th century Charles Dickens novel. As I have repeatedly stated in my comments on this thread, these auto company execs certainly have their share of blame to shoulder in the saga of the seemingly imminent demise of Ford and GM but to make them the whipping boy for all the problems that have led Ford and GM to the sorry state they are in, today, is missing the 'forest' because the 'trees' are getting in the way.
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03-29-2006, 08:57 PM | #16 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
Actually, I'm talking more along the lines of pumping the money back into Ford Motor Company somehow or refusing the pay that the board decided to grant. Like I indicated, charity has it's place. The place for it is NOT when you're company is in the red and shutting down factories. Also 9% isn't accurate. It's 10x less than that at 0.9%.
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03-29-2006, 10:46 PM | #17 | ||||||||||||
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
Unfortunately its been a tough week for me and I somehow allowed myself to fall asleep in the middle of replying to your well thought out post. I see you got alittle personal. A little body check never hurts.
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03-30-2006, 04:16 PM | #18 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
It seems a shame that the original post "domestic/foreign" choices have split into "personality" factions. I actually admire and agree with certain points made by Kell, Jim, and Rick. I know what my criterium are for the purchase of a new car.
It just doesn't seem relevant to me what the political leanings are for these afore mentioned "experts" as to the future of world automobile production /sales. It's a world market. I just hope the US can compete. I will buy what suits me the best. Hopefully, that might include Ford, GM, and Chrysler. The last 10 years that has not happened. Rev
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03-30-2006, 05:20 PM | #19 | |||||||||||||||||
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
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Yes, there are bad guys in the executive suites of American businesses but they are a minority. There are about 5 million corporations in the U.S., 16,000 of them with more than 500 employees and of course there will be the occasional corporate thief and dishonest executive - but they are a distinct minority. U.S. business, as a whole, could not survive if the majority of it's executives were all dishonest and making crap products. Quote:
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President Bush certainly did not lie to the American people and at least 3 high-level, non-partisan investigations - including the '9/11 Commission' report made that crystal clear, in no uncertain terms. I guess you missed all that. Sorry, but you and the rest of the lefties that try to sell that canard by saying 'Bush lied' over and over will not make it magically be true. Your ridiculous contention that the Bush administration is part of some evil conspiracy to bilk the public in order to enrich themselves smacks of pure delusional paranoia on your part. How sad you choose to live with that kind of absurd fallacy as your rationale for resenting the twice-elected President of the United States. Get real. Quote:
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04-03-2006, 03:17 AM | #20 |
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Re: Buying Domestic, Good or Bad
Wow, some things never change. Unit, Mr 5.0 and rbatson still going at it years later!
Thought I would stop by. Man this place is dead! What happened? Everybody sell thier 5.0 for a 4 banger grocery getter? |
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