- Joined
- Feb 16, 2016
Exactly. It's worth remembering that many of the people that do their own maintenance especially within nice car or performance car circles (though I struggle to call an early 2000s TT "nice" or "performance") do so because if they can do it successfully, they save enough money that they can afford to own that nice car day to day, whereas if they had to pay the mechanic the cost of maintenance quickly prices them out.I had to read those two tweets trice, just to make sure that I didn't misread them.
I think Wu is loosing it... more than usual.
Firstly, a politician does not connect with her voters, if she maintains her 'classic sports car' herself (a 2001 Audi TT being a classic sports car, good one), because that means that this politician apparently has enough time and leisure at her hands to repair her own car - while she should do her job. People who actually do repair their car know what a time-consuming, weekend-eating job that can be - if you don't simply change a spark plugs or do something similar trivial. And I am assuming here, that you are able to quickly identify the problem and get your spare parts from a shop, without having to order them.
The normal guy brings his car to the workshop, waits one to four days, while he drives to work with a replacement vehicle and then grows a couple of grey hairs when he looks at the repair bill.
All it really means is they're making sacrifices to own something nice, it doesn't make them the salt of the earth or anything.
I do maintain that if Brianna actually had a nicely kept old "classic" (in the sense that wouldn't get you kicked out of a classic car meet) that could connect with some older voters but it's not the primary selling point of your fucking campaign, that's a pan shot of you waxing it with a loving expression for maybe a second, before you cut to significantly longer shots of you making speeches about issues, posing with your family, having serious looking discussions with other well dressed people, and wearing an earnest expression while talking to more averagely dressed people which we're supposed to believe are constituents across a large round table of some sort.