Gimp wrote:
First thing that jumped out at me was this. It identifies Rob as being of a particular generation, even more than the pants do. I have the same scar, my wife does not.
I'd think I'd be ok with the Colorado and Canyon being as big as they are now if this bed/cab configuration was available.
Keith Tanner wrote: First thing that jumped out at me was this. It identifies Rob as being of a particular generation, even more than the pants do. I have the same scar, my wife does not.
Yeah, this looks unpleasant.
Gasoline wrote:
Had to be one of these:
because nothing on those tires can go fast enough to do THAT on its own.
Mezzanine wrote:Keith Tanner wrote: First thing that jumped out at me was this. It identifies Rob as being of a particular generation, even more than the pants do. I have the same scar, my wife does not.Yeah, this looks unpleasant.
It's one of those massively effective public health initiatives that's basically been forgotten by the public. Hundreds of millions of people died of smallpox in the 20th century (300-500 million according to the sources quoted on Wikipedia) and it's now been eradicated worldwide. We tell ourselves that toys like smartphones changed the world, but I've gotta think that saving half a billion people has to be fairly high up on the list.
You would think by now there'd be a step in designing a product where someone looks it over and makes sure there aren't little swastikas on things.
You probably wouldn't want to walk a day in this man's shoes. A Reddit user took to social media to share the soles of his black leather Polar Fox boots — after he discovered they had left tiny swastika prints on the ground. "There was an angle I didn't get to see when ordering my new work boots," the man wrote. User FRSHFSHFCKR's viral post was viewed more than 2 million times and sparked Nazi-related jokes about the unusual design.
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