GM's excess baggage - Buick, Pontiac, Saab, Hummer

There are many good people here.. Especially among the campers.

Yep. Shows sometimes, makes noise, smells.

Are you trying to say, gently, that American women tend to be lardasses???

It ISNT flat??;>)

Reply to
<HLS
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I know that a lot of stupid people thinks the earth is round ;-)

Reply to
Johannes Andersen

Eeyore proclaimed:

Although cows contribute signifantly more, humans emit a more dangerous greenhouse gas, methane, as a byproduct of digestion.

Reply to
Lon

Fred W proclaimed:

Has as much to do with your right foot as the vehicle. With a decent rear ratio, a wider ratio transmission, good radials, and the old Quadrajet you could hit the low 20s with a 427 [390 hp] in an older Impala. With fuel injection that would go up quite a bit even tho the old Q-Jet wasn't that bad as long as you left the secondaries closed.

Reply to
Lon

Cows don't actually contribute any CO2, and humans don't either. Cows, like humans, can only generate CO2 by eating carbon-containing material. Cows eat grass. The grass was CO2 in the atmosphere only a week before they eat it. It's not important. If the grass dies and turns back into CO2 without the cow, it's just the same. It doesn't matter what the cows eat, because they don't ever eat petroleum or coal. They always eat something that was CO2 a little while before, and will be CO2 a little while later if they don't eat it. People are the same way.

The methane is important, because it wasn't methane before they ate it. Grass + cows can convert CO2 to CO2, which is dull. It's too dull to talk about. The important thing is that grass + cows can convert CO2 to methane, and that is worth talking about. Methane is better insulation than CO2, and contributes more to global warming.

Reply to
Joe

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