Print Story My Truck is Bigger Than Your Cock
Cars
By CheeseburgerBrown (Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:39:13 AM EST) (all tags)
Poor Mohit.

He was so fresh from India that he still sported one of those pompadour hairstyles that are so gentlemanly in Mumbai but positively anachronistic here in the New World. His accent was thick enough to drown baby seals.

He stood in the sundrenched lobby of Toronto BMW, surrounded by pricks in golf shirts that cost more than a set of clubs and by little waif-girls with sparkling purses so small they had to stretch to accommodate an iPhone and a tampon. The golf pricks and the whiny waifs were very displeased, because the rental car outfit associated with BMW had just run out of vehicles.

We'd been waiting for almost two hours.

Periodically, a prick or a waif would come up to Mohit and tear a strip off him while he smiled and nodded. Nobody actually said "Do you know who I am?" but there was a distinctly do-you-know-who-I-am? vibe in the air. After concluding his tirade, one prick unfolded his iPhone and proceeded to tell whoever was on the other end en haute voix how "some clueless FOB" refused to magically call luxury cars out of his brown ass to save the day.

Yes, the rich are different than us -- they're assholes.

"You wanna split my banana with me?" I asked Mohit.

"No thank you sir but thank you sir," he said, smiling glumly.

I ate my banana while Mohit and I talked about India. I asked him if he could arrange for a train for me to hang off the side of, since I really did have to get into the office very soon. He laughed, then excused himself as his telephone buzzed.

There were ten of us waiting there in the sunny lobby. The rental car company managed to scare up two additional vehicles. The question of the moment became: who would score the cars?

First choosies went to a little, sweet old Chinese lady with a ravishing silk scarf. She took the minivan. Then Mohit drew me aside and quietly told me he was giving the second (and final) vehicle to me. "Holy crap -- thank you!" I whispered. "What kind of car is it?"

"There's nothing else to choose from," he apologized pre-emptively.

I frowned. "Dude, what kind of car is it?"

Turns out, my vehicle was a truck the size of a baseball stadium.


Now, in my capacity as Senior Napkin Folder at an events management company, I am privy to the executive speeches prepared for the brass of several major automotive concerns. The message over the last six months has been amazingly consistent between them: Jesus Fuck we'll all doooooooomed!

In my decade of working on internal events of the industry, I have never seen such a panic. The oil crises of the 1970s and 1980s look like wee tiny blips compared to what they're currently up against -- across the board negative growth over the industry litmus-test of Memorial Day Weekend for the first time in half a century, a cliff-like one-fifth reduction in sales over a single quarter, unprecedented since the Great Depression...and projections for worse to come.

Among the hardest hit is General Motors. I have never owned a General Motors vehicle, and have seldom if ever had occasion to drive one until Mohit saddled me with God's Own Truck, the GMC 2008 Sierra.

After driving it for a week, I can now chime in: indeed, General Motors is dooooomed.

It's not about poor performance -- the Sierra has so much internal combustion muscle that it feels like driving a sedan. It's about the fact that many of my rural neighbours drive such vehicles, and what they are attracted to in the vehicle is crazy.

Basically, it's a giant, glossy, motorized penis substitute. It's a one-ton mobile dildo.

If you lack personal confidence or a healthy sense of self-esteem, you've got to get your ass one of these. It's like walking around with a gun in your hand. It's your own personal mountain, a roaring, speeding iceberg of metal whose winking chrome dazzles the eyes and hearts of lesser beings in their tiny, humble pussymobiles. You look down on everyone. You're at a comfortable level to exchange friendly nods with tanker truck drivers and cement mixer drivers, to deign to wave down to the bus driver, to spit on the roof of the tallest mere SUV...

The engine is throaty and unrepentent. It's geared to thrust into overdrive at he drop of a hat, reminding you on every hill that the Sierra would obligingly tow a medium-sized vocational college behind it without breaking a sweat.

It is as wide as a lane. The grille is two storeys high. In its shadow the temperature drops.

Suddenly, I get respect from other drivers in my community -- I'm given room to change lanes, the passing lane is obligingly vacated ahead of me, I'm waved through to turn. Where normally the pick-ups in my neighbourhood vie to quash my ambitions as the driver of a butter-yellow sub-compact, with the glistening silver steed of the Sierra humming under my nuts I'm treated like the King of Spain.

When I brought it home my wife thought I was someone else, and evaluated me as some strange but compellingly manly cutie. Then she recognized me. "Holy shit!" she said later. "I know it's an utterly ridiculous vehicle, but, honestly -- I'm kind of turned on right now."

It's a machine high that pumps right into your blood -- you're a juggernaut of masculinity, a rolling titan of power and poise. It's a drug.

And, like the giant pick-ups in my neighbours' driveways, the tail is immaculate and unscratched -- never used for something so sullying as hauling shit around. (In fact, many of my neighbours go so far as to purchase aftermarket trunks to install in their tail beds, in order to convert the trucks into something more practical.) Though equipped for heavy duty, these are not work machines -- they're sources of artificial self-esteem.

Now I understand better why the demographic in my area can't be persuaded to drive saner vehicles. They make make lip-noise about the global scientific conspiracy to fool us all into thinking the world is changing, but it's just a distraction. The real objection is that if they were forced to drive a smaller, more reasonable car they would be left without the inflated feeling of potency granted by riding a monster.

"Hybrids are gay," I've been told. Now I understand why. It isn't that there's something inherently wrong with fuel efficiency, it's that it offers little else besides. A car is not just a car. It's an emblem.

GMC makes trucks for cowboys, or for men who want to feel like cowboys, even if the truck itself is the only cowboy thing about them. How does General Motors have a hope in Hull of converting that market to desire something sustainable?

The Sierra is the first modern vehicle I have ever seen that features no readout for fuel consumption statistics. It also has no tripmeter to help you measure how far you get on a tank. The automatic and highly robotic transmission offers no alternative mode for economy. It is as if the entire subject of efficiency is forbidden -- banished from awareness, all clues erased except the math you do at the pump.

(For the record, the GMC 2008 Sierra gets about 12 miles per dinosaur. Unless you're driving uphill. Then you might need to top it off with a primordial forest or two worth of organic sludge.)

The air conditioning comes on automatically.

On my way in to work this morning I mowed down a flock of birds. That's right -- a fucking flock. You know how sometimes an airborne flock might stray into the road, the stupidest birds on the trailing edge getting knicked by speeding traffic? Well, in this case my front profile is sufficiently broad that the entire squadron fell into my grille with a sextuplet string of thumps. Even those who saw me coming were too slow to escape the undertow of air raging around my entirely unaerodynamic hugeness. Another notch in the belt marking the unending struggle of man versus nature. Victory!

The king cab is roomy enough for comfortable screwing. The windows are tinted, too. If you sleep over, you could have breakfast for six around the massive centre console surface.

It's a house.

I can't wait until my butter-yellow sub-compact is fixed. I can't afford to keep pumping money into this behemoth, and I don't want my testicles to get addicted to feeling so large. Plus, the air up here is giving me nosebleeds.

On my way home I think I'll run over some deer.


< Good lord. | flashback >
My Truck is Bigger Than Your Cock | 46 comments (46 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
Toronto? by georgeha (4.00 / 1) #1 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:42:12 AM EST
Did you rent a car to impress people, even though you live a hop, skip and a jump away?

I have rented a car to drive to Philadelphia, since my boss and I weren't optimistic that Natty would make it.




My Car is in the Shop. by CheeseburgerBrown (4.00 / 1) #2 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:46:36 AM EST
It suffered a critical gayness failure during highway driving the other week, so I had it dragged downtown so the engine can be serviced and my wallet can be man-raped.

The technician in charge called yesterday to tell me they were test driving it today. If all goes well I can be safely back in my pussymobile sometime on Saturday.


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

I had trouble with your poll by georgeha (4.00 / 1) #4 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:49:15 AM EST
my preferred vehicle is my motorcycle, which reinforces my manliness because it's unforgiving, and I rebuilt the carburetors.

My most common vehicle is my little battered green Tercel.


[ Parent ]

I Admit It! by CheeseburgerBrown (2.00 / 0) #6 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:50:38 AM EST
quant insuff! by georgeha (4.00 / 1) #8 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:53:42 AM EST



[ Parent ]

Service sector employees by ucblockhead (4.00 / 2) #3 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:48:36 AM EST
It never fails to amuse me how the gold-plated help-bullying type-A pricks can't understand that you get much better assistance simply by being nice to people.
----
ウセーバラケダ


Yes, But Thank Goodness! by CheeseburgerBrown (4.00 / 2) #5 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:49:54 AM EST
Their attitudes made it very easy for somebody like me to make a good impression. Around those types you don't have to try -- you just have to avoid being abusive.


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

At Chicago Airport by johnny (4.00 / 2) #22 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:46:01 PM EST
Two type-A businessman assholes were giving a really hard time to a poor woman behind the counter who had informed them that flights had been canceled because there was a fucking fuckstorm going on and it wasn't safe to fly. This answer did not satisfy the asshole businessmen.

When I could take no more of it I went up to one of the guys, real close, looked him in they eye and said, "YOU THINK YOU'VE GOT PROBLEMS, BUDDY? I'VE GOT 'MONKEY GONE TO HEAVEN' BY THE PIXIES STUCK IN MY HEAD AND I CAN'T GET IT OUT!!!"

Both of the guys then left.

I feel quite certain that I have told this story here on HuSi several times before, but I forgive myself, for this story puts me in the absolute best light. That was probably the best thing I've ever done.

WIPO: I don't know.  I just hope they don't reposesses it. I only owe a few hundred bucks on the thing -- 1999 Ford minivan-- but I've been paying real slow. Times are tough, what what.
Buy my books, dammit!
[ Parent ]

the funny thing is by aphrael (4.00 / 2) #26 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:50:43 PM EST
in my mind the fact that i get better assistance by being nice is a pleasant side-effect.

i'm nice to people because i want to be nice to people. i want people to be nice to me, so of course i should be nice.


If television is a babysitter, the internet is a drunk librarian who won't shut up.
[ Parent ]

And of course, after a while, by ambrosen (2.00 / 0) #30 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 05:34:17 PM EST
You just do it because it's more fun being nice to people.

[ Parent ]

I own tow of the most moral rice rockets by Clipper Ship (2.00 / 0) #7 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:50:49 AM EST
on the planet, but the denizens of Mt. Albert, Ontario only understand one word: Hemi. Or, Range Rover. Or, Land Rover. Or, 6 Pick-ups, needed to get me to my job working behind the counter at the local car parts concern.

That prejudice against country people that city people is a well-founded morality I am increasingly trying to spread.

---------------

And draw your dream's rainbow. You have to go through fire and water. When problems stand in the way of success.


the rich are different than us -- they're assholes by wiredog (4.00 / 1) #9 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 11:02:36 AM EST
No. We're assholes too. Maybe not as blatantly, perhaps.



Earth First!
(We can strip mine the rest later.)



Hush, Now! by CheeseburgerBrown (2.00 / 0) #11 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 11:08:15 AM EST
If poor people can't feel that they are inherently more noble by simple virtue of their poverty, what have they got?


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

Rich people act like arseholes by Herring (2.00 / 0) #15 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 12:11:06 PM EST
for that reason. Because it costs them nothing to give us a feeling of moral superiority.

Either that or, as my mum says, you can tell what God thinks of money when you look at the people he's given it to.

I'm English, and as such I crave disappointment. - Bill Bailey
[ Parent ]

So THAT'S why douchebags love Macs so much... by dark nowhere (4.00 / 4) #17 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 12:54:59 PM EST
The poor can get their smugness for free, and the rich want that too.

I am not your dupe account.
[ Parent ]

As a Mac user by wiredog (2.00 / 0) #18 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 01:15:11 PM EST
I had to rate that a 4.

Earth First!
(We can strip mine the rest later.)

[ Parent ]

Mind, by dark nowhere (2.00 / 0) #27 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 03:09:16 PM EST
I don't mean that all Mac users are in it for the smugness, but it's fun to be smug about smug smugs smugness.

I am not your dupe account.
[ Parent ]

It's okay. by ammoniacal (2.00 / 0) #31 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 06:21:08 PM EST
They are.

Irony: ammo says it's time. Tom is blocked.
[ Parent ]

Not all by dark nowhere (2.00 / 0) #34 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 07:07:57 PM EST
I nearly bought a MacBook before I started seeing so much product placement (er, and before the EeePC happened.) Ick. I'm really dying to see a scene with a non-apple lappy in it now.

I am not your dupe account.
[ Parent ]

That thing got a hemi ? by sasquatchan (2.00 / 0) #10 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 11:06:21 AM EST
like your intro ?

And were the birds pigeons, or real birds ?



On the one hand, by blixco (2.00 / 0) #12 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 11:25:40 AM EST
I drive an Acura, which carries with it a certain upmarket marketing scheme. On the other hand, being an RSX it is entirely based on a Honda Civic, which is the phillips screwdriver of automobiles.

I own my car not for the utility or the economy, but for the fun. It's not a true hot rod, but it is quick, and the handling speaks directly to my spine. I couuld own a Kia and be better off, fuel-wise. Thus far the fun is worth the 8 to 10  mpg penalty.

Here in The Republic of Texas, we have Trucks, and we have Cowboy Cadillacs.  The former are driven by folks who work for a living, and use their trucks for work. If it's a Ranch Edition Super Duty but has scratches, mud, and a well worn trailer hitch, it's a work truck. Likewise the standard bare-bones F-150 with enough damage to destroy a small sedan.

But then there's the All Hat, No Cattle crowd, the ones who, like your neighbors, drive a truck because it is big. 

My next door neighbor has a diesel superduty F-350 with a crew cab. He uses it for work, hauling motors from one Peterbuilt garage to the next, normally with a team of mechanics.  The guy next to him has the exact same truck, but polished and clean, with leather surfaces (instead of a hose-out vinyl interior), satellite radio, DVD players, and etc. They both spend $4.50 a gallon every 18 to 20 miles. One manages to get paid per mile of use, as well as per hour of his time.

Me, my car could fit into the beds of their vehicles, sort of an F-18 to their Enterprise. I suppose the analogy fits in a few more ways than one.
---------------------------------
"You bring the weasel, I'll bring the whiskey." - kellnerin


Speaking of Texas, and energy by wiredog (4.00 / 1) #14 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 11:38:55 AM EST
Do you follow How The World Works at Salon?
Republicans own the state, lock, stock and barrel, and Republicans have delivered to their constituents some of the highest electricity prices in the country. Well done!


Earth First!
(We can strip mine the rest later.)

[ Parent ]

Yep. by blixco (2.00 / 0) #28 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 03:56:18 PM EST
Deeeeee-reg-alate ever-got-darn thang, yo.
---------------------------------
"You bring the weasel, I'll bring the whiskey." - kellnerin
[ Parent ]

I've Been Looking at the Civic Hybrid by CheeseburgerBrown (4.00 / 1) #39 Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 02:06:45 PM EST
It's definitely more attractive than the Prius, but still too pricey for me. I wish they made a two-seater option.

Somebody needs to invent a commuting-oriented vehicle that, unlike the godforsaken Smart, is somewhat user-serviceable.

Either that, or someone needs to invent a new thing for pseudo-cowboys to hang their hats on, so all the pressure isn't on the vehicle to deliver the requisite amount of lacking self-esteem. Maybe some kind of over-sized, electrically-powered cutlery?


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

If you can find a used Insight, by blixco (4.00 / 1) #41 Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 05:15:24 PM EST
they were two seat hybrids that did well.

That being said, a used Honda CRX HF will get you between 41 and 50 mpg.

And it uses gasoline, like God intended (that's why He made dinosaurs and Texas).
---------------------------------
"You bring the weasel, I'll bring the whiskey." - kellnerin
[ Parent ]

Oh, my god, I loved my CRX. by toxicfur (4.00 / 1) #45 Sun Jul 20, 2008 at 09:51:23 PM EST
Best car I ever had, and with close to 200K miles, several fender-benders, and a fucked up coolant system, it still got 45 miles to the gallon highway, and almost 40 around town. It also went fast and handled like it read my mind. I miss that car.
--
To Rollins lesbians are like cuddly pandas: cute, exotic, forest-dwelling, dangerous when riled and unable to produce offspring without assistance.-CRwM
[ Parent ]

isn't that what these are for? by aphrael (4.00 / 2) #44 Sun Jul 20, 2008 at 01:50:19 PM EST
You're a good man, Mr. Brown... by atreides (2.00 / 0) #13 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 11:28:57 AM EST
...but you'd have a little trouble making it down here is Tejas. :)

He sails from world to world in a flying tomb, serving gods who eat hope.


Two or three ton mobile dildo, actually by marvin (2.00 / 0) #16 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 12:13:12 PM EST
Basically, it's a giant, glossy, motorized penis substitute. It's a one-ton mobile dildo.
Minor correction. Well over two tons. Three tons for the most common models.

The base model (1500, two door, 2WD) weighs in at 4,453 pounds. The long box crew cab model in a 4WD 3/4 ton has a curb weight (empty) of 6,169 pounds. Remember, only pussies drive a half-ton truck, real men need a 3/4 ton or 1 ton penis enhancer. There is not much difference between a half ton pickup and a girlie-man light truck like a Ford Ranger.

Three tons of steel. In 1970, before the oil crisis, the base model chevy pickup only weighed 3737 pounds. Another reason that GMC is doomed.



he was using by sasquatchan (4.00 / 1) #20 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:11:46 PM EST
Canadian tonnes. Common mistake.

[ Parent ]

Hardly by marvin (4.00 / 1) #23 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:47:01 PM EST
There is only about a 10% difference between a US short ton (2,000 lbs) and a metric ton (or tonne, which is 1,000 kg). 4,453 pounds = 2.01 tonnes.

Plus, there is a major incentive for the typical inadequate truck driver to use the smallest measurement unit available, as it makes the mobile dildo appear larger. Which would you rather have - a 2.2 ton motorized penis enhancer, or a mere 2 tonnes? Size matters.

[ Parent ]

i was going to say the same thing by LilFlightTest (2.00 / 0) #32 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 06:46:04 PM EST
my first car was over two tons.
---------
if de-virgination results in me being able to birth hammerhead sharks, SIGN ME UP!!! --misslake
[ Parent ]

CANYONERO! by jayhawk88 (4.00 / 1) #19 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 01:29:00 PM EST
I know the feeling. A couple of times I've rented Jeep Grand Cherokee's for trips with the wife somewhere. Pales in comparison to something like a Sierra or Expedition but damn is it fun to drive something bigger than what you normally have.



GM by jump the ladder (4.00 / 1) #21 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:24:14 PM EST
Non-North America is doing great but then they seem to build normal cars in the rest of the world not these vast chariots of cheese.



apparently by garlic (2.00 / 0) #24 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:49:16 PM EST
GM buick's built in china are the luxury car of choise there.

[ Parent ]

In Chongqing maybe... by HappyDude (4.00 / 1) #40 Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 03:31:02 PM EST
If you're referring to what Ted Koppel said in his excellent four part series.

I don't remember seeing very many American cars in Beijing when I lived there in 2006. It seemed like the most popular car for showing off how rich you were was the Audi A6 (A4 if you were just kinda rich, A8 if you were disgustingly rich).

[ Parent ]

Hey there! by marvin (2.00 / 0) #25 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 02:49:20 PM EST
Don't be comparing a diverse and beloved food product like cheese to the shitbuckets produced by GM in North America.

Although many GM products are somewhat reminiscent of Cheez Whiz, but that's not cheese anyways.

[ Parent ]

GodDAMN I've missed your writing, CB by ReallyEvilCanine (4.00 / 2) #29 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 04:49:47 PM EST
But I don't really miss driving, nosirree.



me 2 by duxup (2.00 / 0) #35 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 09:59:30 PM EST
n/t
____
[ Parent ]

i'm having trouble with your poll by LilFlightTest (2.00 / 0) #33 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 06:48:32 PM EST
i like my car a lot, and most times i don't even think about what i look like driving it. on those rare times that i do think about it, i swing back and forth between wondering if it makes me look cute, or if other people hate me because they think i'm trying to look cute. in reality i'm not trying to do anything but enjoy the fact that my car's top comes off.
---------
if de-virgination results in me being able to birth hammerhead sharks, SIGN ME UP!!! --misslake


It must be the size by duxup (2.00 / 0) #36 Fri Jul 18, 2008 at 10:03:47 PM EST
There's no explanation for those things otherwise.  My new neighborhood is FULL of those monsters.  Aside from the once a year i wish I had more cargo space, the appeal is beyond me.

Then again my car is to me just a conveyance, and one I'm willing to cheap out on.  My 13 year old honda stops and goes when I press the right pedal and doesn't cost me much.  That's good enough for me.
____


Cargo Space & Insecurity by CheeseburgerBrown (4.00 / 1) #37 Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 11:55:39 AM EST
It seems to me that the lion's share of people who desire maximum cargo space are incorrectly assessing their own needs.

Unless one is using their vehicle for professional tasks, just about nobody needs to be hauling massive quantities of stuff from point to point on a frequent and regular basis.

(Even hockey equipment for two kids could be done with the cargo capacity of a sedan; I could probably do it in my sub-compact if it wasn't cheating for the kids to have a duffel bag across their laps to extend the "cargo" zone.)

I think most people feel the need for cargo space because it feels flexible and prepared to them. It makes them feel comfy and in charge.

These people go to lengths to point out that they're just thinking practically, but the argument doesn't pan out. If the frequency of massive cargo is relatively low, the correct behaviour would be to drive an efficient vehicle and supplement it by renting cargo space on a per case basis (i.e., spending $250 across a season to rent a pickup when needed, rather than spending extra money at the pump every day of the year).

The desire to ultimate cargo space in the light to moderate cargo life indicates chronic anxiety, in my opinion, and I'll bet you dollars to doughnuts it's a demographic feature the advertisers consider pivotal in their marketing meetings. Fear sells, even subconscious fear.

I ramble. I need a coffee. (Blink, blink.)


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

Anybody who really cares about by wumpus (2.00 / 0) #38 Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 02:05:56 PM EST
cargo space will own a "u-haul"* equivalent, provided they have some place to keep it when not in use.

There is a small amount of utility in being able to buy a sofa at any time, without worrying when the sellers will leave said sofa in the rain while you dash to your u-haul, but these are mostly fantasies. If cargo space was really that much of an issue, Dodge could bring back to neon (which could tow 1000lbs), and include the u-haul.

Wumpus (who is annoyed that he can't swing something like this with apartment and present car)

* u-haul is a moving rental equipment company in the US famous for renting towable storage containers. You rent the things one-way, then find a u-haul store to return them to.

[ Parent ]

well by MillMan (2.00 / 0) #42 Sat Jul 19, 2008 at 09:39:25 PM EST
Making up any reason to own an SUV is easy unless you have environmental concerns. They don't cost much more than sedans, and the mileage difference isn't large enough to make a big difference in the average American's budget even now. The only people who can no longer afford the gas on an SUV are the people driving 40 miles each way to $12 an hour service jobs.

When I'm imprisoned as an enemy combatant, will you blog about it?
[ Parent ]

Size by duxup (2.00 / 0) #46 Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 12:36:54 PM EST
Indeed the space gained from such vehicles would seem to be rarely used.   Heck even when I go to work in my little old Honda I don't even need THAT much car.  It's me, and a laptop bag.  I'd say 95% of the time I'm driving my little car I don't even need that much vehicle.

If I lived in a more fair weather climate I'd think of getting one of those little motor scooters out there as I can take just the slow roads to work and around to the local places when needed....

As for renting yeah that is the way to go.  Heck even if I owned an SUV renting a larger truck is likely the way I'd go rather than cramming stuff into those things and making several trips.  I've moved dudes with SUVs... we really did spend more time with several SUVs than we would have with a big rented truck.  They might be large but there isn't nearly as much space in those things as say a uhaul truck and they're pretty much on par with a van and I find vans far easier to move things in and out of.
____
[ Parent ]

Obligatory comment by jimgon (4.00 / 1) #43 Sun Jul 20, 2008 at 10:07:07 AM EST
Either I have good self esteem or I'm just too poor to purchase macho-mobiles.  I always go with inexpensive sedans that  have good fuel economy.   Right now I drive the Kia Rio, which is Kia's attempt to get into the lucrative Honda market.



My Truck is Bigger Than Your Cock | 46 comments (46 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback