Modern cars have no soul.

Godless, modern cars...

Most of them are put together by poorly educated union workers who are sometimes intoxicated while on the job.

My father worked the assembly line in Detroit during the 1970's and he has many horror stories to tell about the things he witnessed there.

One of these stories involved some guy who vomited onto a car, and then installed the car seat over his vomit.
 
I commute 60 miles a day and couldn't name 80% of the new cars on the road.

It's a bunch of cheap GM bullshit.

I absolutely hate those comically over-sized trucks and SUV's that are so large they create blind spots you can't see around.
 
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Is it possible to get a military Hummer H1 or "HMMV" for civilian use?

Hummer were making civilian versions of their vehicles but I think they stopped production? I'm honestly not a hundred percent sure.
Personally I'd rather have a Conquest Knight.
 

Coming from someone who spent extensive time in/with/driving those things....why on earth would you want a 90,000 dollar car that is just WAITING to break?

As for modern cars with no soul....don't need one when you has boost!!

http://www.amsperformance.com/images/shop_cars/drag_evo/dragevo_18.jpg
 
I suppose it depends if the car's soul fits the owners' demands of it. First, the owner has to truly love and care for the car to its' soul to thrive.

My best friend has this weird love affair with his '98 Toyota Corolla. This particular car he seems to love outside of his obsession with old Mopars. He bought it used and rebuilt from the ground up in every respect about 6 years ago. Gave it to his wife after they married, but wanted it back as his 'toy' so bad he bought her a new Corolla. Says the car has some serious soul.

Once the car was his again as his personal toy, he sent it back to the only mechanic he lets touch it for "refitting", as he puts it. This Corolla has a little 1.8, 4 cylinder, 16 valve high performance engine. And believe me, this little car was running and looked just fine already. 3 months later, it came back a stick shift 5 speed, same motor rebuilt yet again (it was originally an automatic) with all sorts of mechanical adjustments throughout for optimal performance.

He took me for a spin in it several weeks ago. On the curvy back roads, way out in the country, on an early Sunday morning. That little fucker put this Corolla through the ringer. Maxed out the speedometer several times (says it needs a speedometer with higher speeds on it), did a couple of 180s, and some serious hang time gliding sideways around several sharp curves. The car ran superb without a glitch. I will never get in that same car with that crazy fucker driving it again. Ever.
 
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I suppose it depends if the car's soul fits the owners' demands of it. First, the owner has to truly love and care for the car to its' soul to thrive.

My best friend has this weird love affair with his '98 Toyota Corolla. ...

...[/B]

This man has a psychiatric disorder. Such bonding is fit only for certain English marques (e.g., Austin Healey, Aston Martin) or US muscle cars. Otherwise, one may have a devotion, but it should not should not interfere with daily living.
 
This man has a psychiatric disorder. Such bonding is fit only for certain English marques (e.g., Austin Healey, Aston Martin) or US muscle cars. Otherwise, one may have a devotion, but it should not should not interfere with daily living.

One should not confuse a soul with demonic possession.
 
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