Gto judge craigslist

Eugene, OR

2008.11.26 22:55 Eugene, OR

Eugene, Oregon and all of Lane County. UO students should try /UofO
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2011.08.04 18:25 Prog Houma, Louisiana

This sub is for locals, transplants, people planning on visiting the Good Earth, or people who are simply Houma at heart. Have a memory or recipe you want to share? Sure, Maw Maw might be disappointed, but we won't judge. Want to discuss local events or culture, let's chat. We only ask you keep it civil. If you aren't sure if your post belongs here, message the mods. We are pretty lax about what is allowed, but this isn't a personals page. Keep your couyon stuff on Craigslist.
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2024.05.19 00:33 Desperate_Ninja_7995 Spotted this clean ‘70 GTO Judge

Spotted this clean ‘70 GTO Judge submitted by Desperate_Ninja_7995 to classiccars [link] [comments]


2024.05.18 12:16 SnooGuavas7869 [FH5] [H] Credits [W] List of cars

submitted by SnooGuavas7869 to ForzaAuctions [link] [comments]


2024.05.17 11:23 SnooGuavas7869 [FH5] [W] List of cars [H] Credits, 3x Alfa 4C and 8C

submitted by SnooGuavas7869 to ForzaAuctions [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 08:01 Rwoods619 animal cruelty charge for a dog that attacked me 5 times

“animal abuse” for dropping a dog at a shelter after it attacked me 5 times
Hello all,
I need some much needed opinions on this matter. Last thursday , i got a corgi from a craigslist type website from a family with children. They said they kept the dog outside for a year.. which should have been a red flag but i ignored it.
Everything was going well until sunday night when the dog unprovoked bit me in the left arm so badly, i had to call an ambulance. I went to the hospital and have all the documents. I received stitches and medical treatment.
The police informed animal control of this bite and animal control refused to take the animal because of some “10 day rabies quarantine” i had to do before i could hand over the dog even though the dog was a harm to me and my animals and my neighbors. I decided to just do it.
The following day the dog bit my hand and attacked me two more times, I called 911 three times and begged AC to come get this dog, once again they called and screamed at me and refused.
The following day, I went in person to the AC shelter and they once again refused to take the dog even though i had the shot papers and the first vet appt for “rabies” quarantine was done.
i then proceeded to call every shelter , rescue, and vet in the counnty( Thjs is Nashville,TN btw) and no one would take the dog due to severity of bite. My personal vet recommend me to just surrender the dog to them because it was an aggressive animal and AC is supposed to take these animals despite this stupid quarantine.
I went back to AC and they once again refused to help me in any way and I had no choice but to “abandon” the dog there as I also would be given an eviction notice from my apartment if the dog wasn’t removed as it was a liability to other residents.
Now they are trying to charge me with 1. Animal Abandonment 2. Animal Cruelty (i’ve had many dogs in my like never ONCE have they not been cared for with the most respect) 3. Interfering with “protocol”
and one other one i don’t know yet.
The officer on the phone today even told me they should have taken the animal.
Now the only option they are giving is to come back and claim the aggressive animal and bring it to my home for a week, but yet they are calling me an “animal abuser”. This dog even attacked me in the car on the way to the shelter. I can’t take this dog back out of fear for my safety, my community, and my dog i’ve had for 12 years.
I have hired representation, but anyone can give me some advice on what to do? Any sane judge would dismiss this case immediately. They have no grounds for this.
This bite i have was almost down to the bone.
This happened in Nashville, Tennessee. It is Davidson County Animal Control on harding st in nashville.
submitted by Rwoods619 to legal [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 21:19 Worldly_Advisor007 I’ve spent over half an hour trying to find specifications on mental health status, and gun purchase in Colorado - am Ohio resident, and gun owner.

I’m not anti gun. I legally have a licensed firearm. Now that’s out of the way my sister, and her husband weren’t/aren’t, they own multiple firearms, and are Colorado residents.
In a mere few months my sister went from a happy wife, loving mother of two, with a phd in psychology working with special needs children - to insane.
She has gone from being sweet natured the first 35 years on this planet to so manic and delusional and full of rage the only thing I can compare it to is how actors in movies behave when they are possessed by a demon, and the priest is trying to pull it out. Not hyperbolic.
What’s very bad here is she’s convinced her husband wants to kill her. All guns were removed from their home weeks back. Things have continued to escalate - my brother in law, and nieces are living with my parents who moved to Colorado to be near the grandkids.
She’s so manic/paranoid/delusional she did $12,300 in damages to their home. Not factored into that insurance estimate, she threw away everything wardrobe wise tied to her daughters from bows to shoes - she was meticulous. Put it all in the trash, and poured gasoline over everything. Thankfully, whatever reason she didn’t light it - probably, lack of lighter. Then took off in a car with no wallet or ID. Her car was found abandoned in New Mexico with the keys in the ignition. She was picked up by the police 48 hrs later on some random highway, and a seven day psy hold was done.
She is now out.
You all have ZERO idea how hard it is to force psychiatric care - we even found an ad she typed for Craigslist (but didn’t post) looking for a hitman. Police said because it wasn’t posted with a monetary amount it’s not enough of a sign of “grave risk of violence”.
I’ll skip the other insane things she’s done.
She is a threat to others - that’s reality.
She has no psychiatric record in Colorado as the 1001 things she’s done aren’t enough for forced evaluation - you must have solid proof someone is “grave threat of suicide or homicide”.
In Ohio it is very easy to get a gun via private buyer. Out there, Colorado, it’s private sellers have to start background checking in 2025 correct? Currently, private sales can/do take place. Regardless, everything is vague on psychiatric history… a judge has to rule an individual unable to purchase a gun?
My sister is beautiful, poised (well was), and can appear sane long enough to buy a gun. Odds are if this occurs, and she’d have to have cash hidden somewhere she hasn’t used - she will end up in prison for attempted murder or murder.
I sound hyperbolic. Again, I’m not.
Her husband is consumed with emergency full custody/restraining order that states she can’t be anywhere near her daughters.
My 75 year old father asked me to look up Colorado gun laws, but you just had all this stuff hit the floor for a vote. The law doesn’t mean it’s followed. I can’t find what Colorado considers mental health illegibility - and this entire thing is upsetting to even be doing.
Turns out bi polar can develop at any age and turn a loved one into an unrecognizable monster. Pretend this is your sister, and like you she’s in Colorado. How easy will it be for her to get a firearm? Cash. As easy as Ohio?
Appreciate your time.
Also, she does have a conceal carry permit.
Edit: If anyone ever finds themselves in this situation here is a link I was given below!
https://cdphe.colorado.gov/colorado-gun-violence-prevention-resource-bank/prevention-approaches/extreme-risk-protection-orders
submitted by Worldly_Advisor007 to COGuns [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 04:43 Khemix12 Landscape Help/Ideas

Landscape Help/Ideas
Hello everyone, before jumping into this post, I would like to share that everything done in these pictures has been done by two people with their hands and hand tools, that’s all. I decided it was time to help my parents landscape their property because of their age and just general health. They enjoy gardening and just kinda hanging out outdoors. We definitely aren’t made of money in the slightest so please no judgy comments :). I don’t have many before pictures so it’s kind of hard to judge what we’ve actually done but I’ll throw some out here.
Pictures 1-4 : I’m still working on cleaning up but there used to be rotten, bug infested railroad ties, goat heads/stickers, nasty vines, and weeds where there is now river rock. I still have a few spots to pull all the wood chips, till the weeds, spray, lay weed mat, and lay down new/fresh wood chips. I get free wood chips through work and have gone and picked all the river rock by hand from nearby rivers.
Picture 5 : They have a camper that is used just about every summer. This is the only available place they have to park it and the total span of the side of the house is about 35-40 feet or so including the camper. My plan as of right now is to cut the weeds and grass down and possibly till it so weeds don’t come back but I’m unsure what to lay down to keep it from getting muddy. I thought about using more wood chips and river rock as a temporary beauty solution but when the camper gets moved, the rocks would just need to be moved.
I could also afford to put down a ton or two of gravel but it would just get kicked around the property without some sort of barrier. So I’m mostly looking for what would be the best solution to keep a base down and freshen up the looks.
I also should note the fence is the neighbors and their house and fence caught on fire so it’s really an eyesore and not much has been done to fix it.
Picture 6 : At the end of the yard, it comes to a hard slope/drop off that lead to old broken up cement. It’s kind of hard to see but it’s drastic enough that when it’s wet, it’s definitely a hazard. It is also nearly impossible to mow or even weed eat. I sunk these railroad ties into the dirt to temporarily allow them a safer step down when it’s muddy.
My first idea was at the beginning of the slope, tilling it completely down, adding weed mat, and adding either gravel or wood chips as a base and then river rock just to keep it pretty. The other idea I had was searching around Craigslist, Facebook, whatever and finding retaining wall bricks (which I understand would be more expensive and time consuming) to add at the end of the slope and filling it with dirt. Nearby farms and construction sites will deliver fill dirt for cents on the dollar.
If anyone has any ideas, suggestions, wrongs, rights, anything is absolutely appreciated. This has for sure been a handful of a job but I have every reason to be stubborn and continue. Thank you!
Big shoutout to my fiance for being there every step of the way as well!
submitted by Khemix12 to landscaping [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 03:22 bighoss45 Stock car tuning.

Stock car tuning.
I'm wanting to make a vintage stock car roster and I'm trying to tune a few cars to make a baseline top speed of about 195-200mph I was wondering what the best way to get each car to that baseline. I have 3-4 cars to represent each manufacturer those being the 68' Charger, 70' Chevelle, 70' Super bee, 69' GTO Judge, and possibly the mustang Mach 1. I've added the same engine,brakes,transmission,wheel and suspension upgrades to each car. Would the power restrictor help? I've added one to the Super bee and I'm not sure how to use it. Any suggestions on how to to get the speeds I'm looking for?
submitted by bighoss45 to granturismo [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 02:15 nomorelandfills No, You Beg - 2021 article from The Cut about the difficulty in adopting in the COVID era

No, You Beg - 2021 article from The Cut about the difficulty in adopting in the COVID era
Another copied article to keep in reserve. It's an odd article from the pandemic, recounting the boom in rescue adoptions. It is a fairly pointless article in that it uses some really shifty rescuers, including Pixies and Paws, as sources, brightly highlights a bioethicist who uses her own foolish adoption of two pit bull mixes as evidence that most people shouldn't own dogs, and chronicles but fails to understand the loathing rescuers have for adopters. It does, however, wonderfully illustrate how rapidly the good times ended in rescue. Anyone reading the the current "we've never been so overwhelmed with dogs" rescue laments should know that there's a link between today's problems and yesterday's reckless opportunism.
The "bioethicist"
“I think it’s probably true that the majority of people who want to adopt a dog should not,” Jessica Pierce, a bioethicist who studies human-animal relationships, tells me. “They don’t have the wherewithal and don’t have what they need to give the animal a good life.” She herself ended up with two pets that didn’t get along at all — a herding mix and a pointer mix whose constant fighting made the idea of hosting a dinner party both perhaps “bloody” and definitely “scary and miserable.” She says shelters shouldn’t “drive away potentially loving and appropriate adopters because they don’t meet predetermined criteria,” but she also sees the importance of a thorough application process that prepares humans for the pitfalls of pet parenthood. “You need to be ready to have a dog who doesn’t like people very much,” says Pierce. When Bella, the 11-year-old she got from the Humane Society, dies, she’s not sure she will get a replacement, noting that the pandemic puppy boom is “driven by a reflection of human narcissism and neurosis.”
However, this is a fantastic truth long overdue for the telling.
“I started to talk to shelter leaders across the country,” Cushing says. “And one by one, they said any adoptable dog without a medical issue is gone by noon on Saturday. But the public didn’t know that. Only the dog seekers and the experts did.”
https://preview.redd.it/v2owlquz230d1.png?width=1139&format=png&auto=webp&s=a95a7983b4f018f043125a0819a16941cec1e6aa
Jack, adopted by Tori and Paris through In Our Hands Rescue.
It was a rainy Sunday in June, and Danielle had fallen in love.
The 23-year-old paralegal spent the first part of her afternoon in McCarren Park, envying the happy dog owners with their furry companions. Then she stumbled upon an adoption event in a North Brooklyn beer garden, where a beagle mix being paraded out of the rescue van reminded her of the dog she grew up with, Snickers. It all felt like fate, so she filled out an application on the spot. She was then joined by her best friend and roommate, Alexa, in sitting across from a serious-looking young woman with a ponytail who was searching for a reason to break her heart.
Danielle and Alexa were confident they would be leaving with Millie that day: After all, they had a 1,000-square-foot apartment within blocks of McCarren and full-time employment with the ability to work from home for the foreseeable future. But the volunteer kept posing questions that they hadn’t prepared for. What if they stopped living together? What if Danielle’s girlfriend’s collie mix didn’t get along with her new family member? What would be the solution if the dog needed expensive training for behavioral issues? Which vet were they planning to use?
All of which, upon reflection, were reasonable questions. But when it came to the diet they planned for the dog, they realized they were out of their depth. Danielle recalled that Snickers had lived to 16 and a half on a diet of Blue Buffalo Wilderness, the most expensive stuff that was available at her parents’ Bay Area pet store. “Would you want to live on the best version of Lean Cuisine for the rest of your life?” sniffed the volunteer with a frown. She would instead recommend a small-batch, raw-food brand that cost, when they looked it up later, up to $240 a bag. “If you were approved, you’d need to get the necessary supplies and take time off from work starting now,” the dog gatekeeper said. “And the first 120 days would be considered a trial period, meaning we would reserve the right to take your dog back at any time.” The would-be adopters nodded solemnly.
The friends rose from the bench and thanked the volunteer for her time. Believing they were out of earshot, the volunteer summed up the interview to a colleague: “You just walked by, and you’re fixated on this one dog, and it’s because you had a beagle growing up, but you want to make your roommate the legal adopter?”
When Danielle and Alexa were young, one could still show up at a shelter, pick out an unhoused dog that just wanted to have someone to love, and take it home that same day. Today, much of the process has moved online — to Petfinder, a.k.a. Tinder for dogs, and various animal-shelter Instagram accounts that send cute puppy pics with heartrending stories of need into your feed and compel you to fill out an adoption application as you sit on the toilet. Posts describing the dogs drip with euphemisms: A dog that might freak out and tear your house up if left alone is a “Velcro dog”; one that might knock down your children is “overly exuberant”; a skittish, neglected dog with trust issues is just a “shy party girl.” Certain shelters have become influencers in their own right, like the L.A.-based Labelle Foundation, which has almost 250,000 Instagram followers and counts Dua Lipa and Cara Delevingne among its A-list clients. Rescue agencies abound, many with missions so specific that you could theoretically find one that deals in any niche breed you desire, from affenpinschers to Yorkshire terriers.
This deluge of rescue-puppy content has arrived, not coincidentally, during a time of growing awareness of puppy mills as so morally indefensible that even Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez could draw fire for seemingly buying a purebred French bulldog in early 2020. Then came the pandemic puppy boom, a lonely, claustrophobic year in which thousands of white-collar workers, sitting at home scrolling through their phones, seemed simultaneously to decide they were finally ready to adopt a dog. The corresponding demand spike in certain markets has simply overwhelmed the agencies: New York shelters that were used to receiving 20 applications a week were now receiving hundreds, with as many as 50 people vying for a single pup.
The rescue dog is now, indisputably, a luxury good, without a market pricing system at work to manage demand. A better analogy might be an Ivy League admissions office. But even Harvard isn’t forced to be as picky as, say, Korean K9 Rescue, whose average monthly applications tripled in 2020.
And yet someone has to pick the winners — often an unpaid millennial Miss Hannigan doling out a precious number of wet-nosed Orphan Annies to wannabe Daddy Warbuckses and thus empowered to judge the intentions and poop-scooping abilities of otherwise accomplished urban professionals, some of whom actually did go to Harvard.
This has led to some hard feelings. Every once in a while, someone will complain on Twitter about being rejected by a rescue agency, and it will reliably set off a cascade of attacks on “entitled rich white millennials assuming they can have whatever they want,” followed by counter-attacks on those who “appoint themselves the holy sainted guardian of all animals.” Danielle was ultimately deemed unworthy, not even receiving a generic rejection letter over email. After all, there isn’t really that much incentive for the rescue agencies to be polite these days.
The modern animal-rescue movement grew alongside the child-welfare movement in the mid-19th century. It got another boost in the years following World War II, when Americans were moving out to the suburbs in droves, according to Stephen Zawistowski, a professor of animal behavior at Hunter College. Suddenly, there were highways, yards, and space. Walt Disney was making movies about children and dogs that promoted the idea that no new home was complete without a loyal animal companion. (Zawistowski said that one might call this the Old Yeller Effect, but there were various riffs on the same theme over the ensuing decades. Essentially, Flipper was “Let’s put Lassie in the water.”)
In the early ’80s, University of Pennsylvania researchers confirmed the effects that animal companionship has on everything from blood pressure to heart conditions to anxiety. Pets were no longer just how you taught Junior to be responsible; they might be critical to maintaining adults’ physical and mental health. The way people spoke about animals started changing. The idea that “homeless” dogs were sent to the “pound” because they were “bad” went out of fashion. “Suddenly, you had ‘rescue’ dogs brightly lit in the mall,” says Ed Sayres, a former president of the ASPCA who now works as a pet-industry consultant. “Basically, we gave animals a promotion.” Meanwhile, in the late ’80s, spay and neuter procedures had been streamlined and were being recommended by vets as well as by Bob Barker on The Price Is Right.
Then came The Ad. Released in 2007, it featured close-ups of three-legged dogs and one-eyed cats rescued by the ASPCA over a wrenching rendition of Sarah McLachlan’s “Angel.” The commercial warned that “for hundreds of others, help came too late.” In just a year, the ad raised 60 percent of the ASPCA’s annual $50 million budget. The organization was reportedly able to increase the grant money it gave to other animal-welfare organizations by 900 percent in ten years. It is difficult to overstate the emotional hangover The Ad inflicted on millennials and members of Gen Z. Janet M. Davis is a historian at the University of Texas at Austin, where she lectures on animal rights to a demographically diverse body of students — everyone from cattle ranchers to vegan punks — most of whom cry when she shows The Ad in class. “It absolutely brings down the house,” she says. “Every time.”
Theoretically, the point of dog adoption is that there are more dogs born into the world than there are humans lined up to care for them. But as interest grew, the supply problem became less acute. Thanks to widespread spay and neuter policies, there are simply too few unwanted litters for what the adoption market wants.
National chains like PetSmart partnered with local shelters to supply its animals for sale. Savvy rescues in dog deserts like New York hooked up with shelters in the Deep South, where cultural attitudes toward spaying and neutering pets are much more lax. While there is no official registry of how many shelter dogs are available in the U.S., in 2017, researchers at the College of Veterinary Medicine for Mississippi State University published a study reporting that the availability of dogs in animal shelters was at an all-time low. “That is,” says Sayres, “an environment that leads to a kind of irrational, competitive behavior.” The rescue mutt had become not just a virtue signal but a virtue test. Who was a good enough human being to deserve a dog in need of rescuing?
Heather remembers the old easy days. “I went on Craigslist and an hour later, I had a puggle,” she says of her first dog-getting experience with her boyfriend in college. George the puggle humped everything in sight, shed everywhere, and chewed through furniture until the end of his life, but she loved him all the same.
Flash-forward 16 years: She and that boyfriend are married, have two kids, and can’t seem to get a new dog no matter what they try. Yes, she could find a breeder easily online (currently for sale on Craigslist: a Yorkie-poo puppy from a breeder asking $350 and just a few screening questions). But instead, in the middle of the pandemic, “I was sending ten to 12 emails a night and willing to travel anywhere, and no one would give us any sort of animal,” she remembers. Shelters would send snappy emails about how her family wasn’t suited for a puppy, even though they made good money and had clearly cared for their dearly departed George — they once drove three hours to get the dog a specially made knee brace. “I was trying to be really up front with people and would say that my daughter has autism and that I have a 3-year-old, and they would say no. It felt like they were saying, ‘We don’t give dogs to people who have disabilities.’ ”
It didn’t matter what kind of dog she applied for — older, younger, bigger, smaller — there was always an official-sounding excuse as to why her family wasn’t suitable. (“Pups this age bite and jump and scratch and while they are cute to look at, they are worse than a bratty ADHD toddler, without diapers,” one rescue wrote. “Sorry.”) She considered looking at emotional-support animals that work specifically with autistic youth but found out they could cost 18 grand and require a two-year waiting period. She couldn’t stomach the idea of setting up a GoFundMe, as other people in the community had. “It got to the point of me wondering, Okay, so what dogs do children get?” she recalls. “I always thought that dogs and children go together.” By the fall of 2020, Heather had turned back to breeders. “People get a little spicy when you say you paid for a dog. You want to scream that you tried your hardest, but it wasn’t possible,” she says.
Others, like Zainab, figured out ways to work the system. She blanketed agencies with applications in the early months of the pandemic, applying for 60 dogs. (The ease of applying online might also explain the statistics.) She thought the fact that she had a leadership role in public education would demonstrate that she was both successful and nurturing. “I’m a professional, I make good money, and I have a master’s degree,” she tells me. She was rejected all the same. Finally, a co-worker suggested Zainab make a résumé in order to stand out. The multipage document — which features testimonials from high-powered friends, including local elected officials — is what got her an exclusive meeting with Penny the pug in a parking lot. She was handed over with a leash tied around her neck and vomited in the front seat of Zainab’s car about three blocks later. Success!
Or take Lauren, who’d had dogs all her life and found living solo during COVID lonely. “You can’t be without an animal at this particular time,” she told herself. So she started applying for dogs on Petfinder and boutique-rescue websites. “I would look up at my clock, and it would be two in the morning,” she says. Her hopes were high when she got a meeting with a Chihuahua mix in the suburbs named Mary Shelley. Lauren thought the meeting went well, but it ultimately didn’t result in the interviewer granting the adoption. “Then I was in conspiracy-theory mode, thinking she doesn’t like gay people, or single people, or people who live in the city,” she says. “It was a crazy-making experience. It’s a pandemic, so your world is already turned upside down, but I became psychotic.
“The people who run rescue organizations — this was their moment to shine,” she adds. “Even though they were totally bogged down with requests, they got to feel the power. They got to make someone’s dreams come true or smash them to the ground.”
The inquiries can get extremely personal. “I found the questions very offensive,” says Joanna, a Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center nurse who tried to adopt last year with her architect husband. “I was like, ‘What does this have to do with getting a dog?’ ” Her husband didn’t even want to put the thought out into the universe, but he was forced to admit that he’d probably be the one to take a shared pet in the event of a divorce. The two also had to grapple with what would happen if one or both of them died of COVID during the pandemic. And would both of them be able to take three days off at a moment’s notice to help the dog acclimate to its new home? “I was frank with her and said, ‘I take care of cancer patients,’ ” says Joanna. “She was very unsatisfied with our answer.”
“The more popular the rescue is on the internet, the more clout they have,” says Molly, a writer in New York. “If you have a really good social-media presence, you can throw your weight around.” (The clout goes both ways: Posting about your rescue dog on Instagram is an indirect way of broadcasting that someone out there deemed you morally worthy enough to be chosen.) She inquired about eight dogs in six weeks from about five different rescues, only to be continually rejected. She finally got an interview with a rescue agency whose cute dogs she had seen on social media. They asked to tour her apartment over Zoom. Fine. They asked for her references. Great. But then they asked if she would pay for an expensive trainer. She asked if she could wait — not only was it during the height of COVID, but the cost of the sessions with the trainer could be close to $1,000. The person she was dealing with said over email that dogs were investments and suggested she look elsewhere. “I was like, This is so Brooklyn,” she says.
Still, others wished the warning about trainers had been more explicit. At the height of the pandemic, Steven remembers scrolling through social-media post after social-media post saying things like “URGENT: NEED TO FIND THIS GUY A HOME” while “picturing this dog on a conveyor belt going toward this whirring saw. And meanwhile I am screaming at my phone, ‘I applied and you turned me down!’ ”
But after securing a dog, he came to believe the process, while tough on the human applicants, wasn’t tough enough when it came to the dog’s needs. Right off the bat, Cooper was very hyper and mouthy when playing. “We were doing the thing that everyone does, like, posting pics: ‘We’re at the park, isn’t this fun, hahaha,’ ” he says. But the reality was much less Instagram-worthy. Cooper became difficult to handle, especially in a small New York apartment; mouthiness escalated to gnashing his teeth and guarding food. “It’s embarrassing, and I hate having to tell people we had to give the dog back,” he says. (So much so that Steven requested a pseudonym for himself and for Cooper.) “To be frank, the experience we had with the dog was pretty traumatic. If this volunteer had felt so powerful, I wish that they had said we wouldn’t be able to handle this dog.” Although Steven’sInstagram is replete with photos of other friends’ dogs, evidence of Cooper’s existence has disappeared from the account.
The rescue-dog demand has also been stressful for the overwhelmed (and overwhelmingly volunteer) workforce that keeps the supply chain running. On a recent Saturday, Jason was speeding toward JFK airport in a windowless white van covered in graffiti. Though he was on his way to help rescue dogs, he is the first to admit he’s not the biggest fan of the animals. “I just need something to do,” he says. “I was going crazy sitting around the house.” His friend, who was employed at a rescue, recommended him for an unpaid gig. Prior to the pandemic, he managed an Off Broadway play in the city. The 34-year-old, who is athletically built with a shaved head, has a compulsive need to be coordinating a production, and getting dogs to New York City from a different continent is definitely that.
Many of the city’s rescue dogs come from other parts of the world these days, brought over by volunteers who take them through a complicated Customs process. This is part of what Pet Nation author Mark Cushing calls the “canine freedom train.” A former corporate trial attorney, Cushing had thought that American shelters were filled with dogs with a figurative hatchet outside their kennel; that was until his daughter, a shelter volunteer, said that, in fact, scores of people were lined up around the block every weekend in hopes of adopting a handful of dogs. “I started to talk to shelter leaders across the country,” Cushing says. “And one by one, they said any adoptable dog without a medical issue is gone by noon on Saturday. But the public didn’t know that. Only the dog seekers and the experts did.”
Jason waited in arrivals, ready to stop anyone who walked by with dog crates. When he saw some, he swooped in. It turned out that he had ended up with an extra animal — one that was yowling like it needed to get out and pee. He couldn’t figure out to whom it belonged, and after about 40 minutes of drama in the pickup area, two large men jumped out of a truck with out-of-state plates. They handed Jason $20 before he knew what was happening, loaded the dog into their Silverado, and sped off toward North Carolina. It was unclear if they were adopters themselves or worked for a shelter.
With that out of the way, Jason tried to carefully maneuver a luggage cart full of the remaining dog crates to the lot where he was parked. When one fell, the animal inside didn’t make a sound, presumably zonked from its long journey across the ocean. More volunteers were waiting at the shelter with food, water, and an enormous number of puppy pads when he arrived. After the animals decompressed from their long flight, they would be taken to an adoption event, where they would hopefully meet their new humans.
Emily Wells hasn’t taken a vacation in years. She works full time on Wall Street but is also the coordinator for Pixies & Paws Rescue — a job that she does in between calls and meetings and emails. That means responding to DMs on Instagram about available dogs, attending adoption events on weekends, and getting on the phone with a vet at 10 p.m. because one of her fosters got sick. That also means screening applications, which more than doubled during the height of the pandemic. Typically, she denies about one-third. This part of her job might not be the most physically demanding, but it does take a psychic toll.
“What I’ve found is a lot of people are very entitled,” she says. “They send nasty emails. I’ve been called every name in the book. But there are reasons we deny. We are entrusted with placing a living, breathing thing in someone’s home for the rest of its life.” She wishes people would understand that the rescue is just her and one other person trying their best to deal with off-the-charts levels of demand. “I know rescues that don’t even reply,” she says. “So the fact that we do and still get shit for that is annoying.” And explaining why someone was rejected can create its own problems: What if they use that information to fib on their next application?
Rescues like Wells’s are largely dependent on foster parents to house the dogs they import. Foster-to-adopt is one way that people adopt pets, a means of testing out compatibility and increasing one’s chances of adopting in a hypercompetitive city. But demand for dogs was so high last year that even proven volunteers couldn’t get their hands on a foster. Take Suchita, an animal lover who moved from India to New Jersey for her husband’s VP job with a big bank in 2019. Unable to work owing to visa issues, she became a prolific dog fosterer for a rescue in Queens. She also worked with a program that pairs volunteers with elderly animal owners who need help taking their pets out on walks. That program was suspended during COVID, which left Suchita desperate for more dog time.
Figuring that online volunteer work might fill the void, she started helping another organization wade through its massive backlog of applications by calling references. She offered to foster more dogs but didn’t hear back, nor did her attempts to adopt pan out. When she went ahead and adopted Sasha, a Pomeranian, through another rescue agency, the first organization was not happy. “After I posted Sasha on Instagram, they called me saying it was a conflict of interest to have worked with another agency,” Suchita says. “I was not at all prepared for that. Then they unfollowed me. It really hurt, but no hard feelings.” She is humbly aware of the fact that in New York, there is always someone who has a nicer apartment, a better job, and more experience than you. If everything else is equal, why shouldn’t a shelter try to give a dog to someone who can afford to give it the best life possible?
“They don’t treat humans nicely, but at least they treat dogs nicely,” she says.
In some corners of the rescue world, a reckoning is taking place. Rachael Ziering, the executive director of Muddy Paws Rescue, which found homes for around 1,000 dogs last year, got her start volunteering at other nonprofits whose adoption processes she found abhorrent. She saw, for instance, people look at adoption applications and say, “Oh, that’s a terrible Zip Code. I’m not adopting to them.” Or they would judge people based on their appearance. “I know a lot of groups that will ask for your firstborn along with your application,” she says. “I think it’s well intentioned, but I think it just took a turn at some point. It’s morphed into sort of an unhealthy view that no one’s ever gonna be good enough. Nobody’s ever perfect — the dog or the person.” Muddy Paws is instead embracing what is known as “open adoption,” a philosophy that allows for rescue volunteers to be more open-minded about what a good dog home might look like. It has started gaining traction among groups like the ASPCA in recent years, in part because the organization’s current president was denied a dog — twice. Instead of rejecting applicants outright based on their giving the “wrong” answers, Ziering’s team speaks with hopeful dog owners at length, learning about their lifestyles and histories to match them with the pet best for their family. Still, even a more inclusive philosophy toward profiling adoption applicants comes up against the intractable math: There are only so many dogs that need homes. Though Muddy Paws rejects less than one percent of applicants, some decide to adopt elsewhere if it means getting a dog faster.
Is any of this good for the dogs? Depends on whom you ask. If the intense questions involved in securing the dog cause someone to reflect before making a decision they’ll regret — sure. Others note that the average dog’s life span has hovered around 11 years for decades. “I think it’s probably true that the majority of people who want to adopt a dog should not,” Jessica Pierce, a bioethicist who studies human-animal relationships, tells me. “They don’t have the wherewithal and don’t have what they need to give the animal a good life.” She herself ended up with two pets that didn’t get along at all — a herding mix and a pointer mix whose constant fighting made the idea of hosting a dinner party both perhaps “bloody” and definitely “scary and miserable.” She says shelters shouldn’t “drive away potentially loving and appropriate adopters because they don’t meet predetermined criteria,” but she also sees the importance of a thorough application process that prepares humans for the pitfalls of pet parenthood. “You need to be ready to have a dog who doesn’t like people very much,” says Pierce. When Bella, the 11-year-old she got from the Humane Society, dies, she’s not sure she will get a replacement, noting that the pandemic puppy boom is “driven by a reflection of human narcissism and neurosis.”
“A lot of this is driven by Instagram,” she says. “We have this expectation that dogs are not really dogs; they’re toys or fashion accessories.”
I’m not pushing you, but it seems like you want to bring him home,” the Badass Animal Rescue volunteer said with the controlled energy of a used-car salesperson. Bill and Sherrie, a middle-aged couple who had lost their English bulldog three years ago, were looking for a replacement. The dog with a bright-red boner jumped on Bill, and everyone pretended not to notice. “He definitely has energy,” Bill said brightly. The couple were on the fence, and the volunteer could sense the close slipping away.
Although this organization saw applications rise 200 percent during the pandemic, things are now recalibrating back to normalcy. We are, it seems, witnessing the cooling of the puppy boom. The unbearable loneliness of the pandemic has abated, replaced with anxiety about how to possibly do all the things all of us used to do every day. New Yorkers are being summoned back to the office or planning vacations. Many young professionals are finding that, when given the option between scrolling through rescue websites until 2 a.m. or doing drunken karaoke in a room full of friends, Dog Tinder is losing its appeal. Local shelters are seeing application numbers slip — many say they have returned to pre-COVID levels — which, in turn, has made it slightly more of an adopter’s market.
Bill and Sherrie went to the hallway to talk it over. He was definitely a puller like their old dog, Xena. And he was also a hell of a shedder. The volunteer kept talking about something called a “love match,” but was this really one? “We’re just gonna need a little more time,” Sherrie confessed when they came back inside. No one was making eye contact. As they prepared to leave, the dog jumped up on Bill again, his tongue flopping sideways and his wagging tail spraying white fur. He was clearly not aware that the tenor of the room had shifted. “We might be back,” Bill said with an obvious twinge of guilt. “Don’t worry!”
We will probably look back on the class of pandemic dogs adopted in 2020 as the most desirable unwanted dogs of all time — the ultimate market-scarcity score for a slice of virtuous, privileged New York City. People like Danielle will see them paraded around places like McCarren Park, the living, breathing trophies for self-satisfied owners who made it through the gauntlet. At least for the next 11 years or so.
submitted by nomorelandfills to PetRescueExposed [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 22:19 1_BigPapi I'm Selling my Lifelong Collection

I mentioned this in a reply a few weeks ago and got a bunch of DMs about it. So hopefully this is allowed-
I'm parting with a lifelong collection. Started playing somewhere between 94/95. Serious buyers are welcome to reply here for more info.
I only inventoried around 3,000 cards out of tens of thousands, but think I captured 98% of the money cards. Other 2% mixed in with bulk.
Selling:
I'm also posting this up on a few marketplaces. Tried and can't do ebay because my account isn't approved for high enough amount but Craigslist, FB and anywhere else I can post, I will.
I live near in Northern Virginia near DC. I'm willing to drive a small distance with some cards. Will not ship. Will not sell singles, too much work.
https://preview.redd.it/qp9d6casy10d1.jpg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=52abdadedbca2af1c0cbc28001f1c2f96fee6628
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submitted by 1_BigPapi to mtg [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 06:03 blgamecock [FH5] [W] Listed Below [H] Lots of Rares Listed Below & Cr.

Want: - Hoonigan Focus 9 - Lancia 037 Stradale - Lancia Delta S4 - McLaren 650s Spider - Ferrari 599 GTO - Ferrari California T - Morris Series II Traveler - Morris Traveller - Mercedes AMG GTS - Lexus LC500 - Ford Super Wagon Deluxe - Plymouth Belvedere - Plymouth Fury - Polaris RZR Pro - Pontiac GTO Judge - Pontiac Firebird - Sierra 700R - Subaru Legacy
Have: - Ferrari 512 TR - Ferrari F8 Tributo - Ferrari 575M - Vauxhall Lotus Carlton - Toyota AT37 - Mitsubishi Galant VR-4 - Audi RS7 Sportsback ‘21 - Nissan Safari Turbo - Eagle Speedster - McLaren 765LT - McLaren F1 - HDT VK Commodore - Mercedes Benz SL 65 Black - Jaguar XKR-S GT - KTM X-Bow GT4 - Maserati 8CTF - Honda Ridgeline Baja - Lamborghini Aventador J - Lamborghini Gallardo LP570P - Porsche 356C Cabriolet Emory - Porsche 550A - Porsche 550A Spyder - Cadillac CT5 Blackwing - Cadillac CT4 Blackwing - Cadillac Limo - W Motors Lykan Hypersport - Noble M600 - Wuling Sunshine - Subaru 22B-STI - BMW M3 ‘21 - BMW 850CSI
Plus more. This is a condensed list of what I have
submitted by blgamecock to ForzaAuctions [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 19:01 NewJMGill12 Radically Exploitable Villains Allow for Radically Exploitative Deviations

Here’s where it started, the second level of a hyper-turbo Jackpot Spin-N-Go (My 1,249th game, if you saw my 1,000 spin post].
Hero is holding Qs2s on the button heads up, and the turn’s board is Js7h4dTs There are 10 blinds in the pot, and the villain donk leads for 4 BBs, and Hero only has 5.3 BBs behind. My default in this spot is to click raise and just run it (there's usually a chance that I'm up against draws I'm beating, hence I judge it to be a +EV dcision), so why just call here?
Well, this is why:
Hero clicks call, leaving an SPR of 0.07 for the river. River is a complete brick as it pertains to Hero's hand, Ah, and Villain leads for a blind.
Hero folds: Clicking call in a spot like this only makes sense if you are planning to (and then actually follow through with a) fold the river.
So, that’s where the hand ends, 28.7 BBs for the villain, 1.3 for Hero. ICM gives Hero a 4.3% chance of winning from this position. And, even worse, the blinds go up.
Hero is dealt all-in in the big blind for his 0.81 BBs, and is rewarded for his fold with AsAd
And then… I get walked
But, this is exactly why I flatted turn and folded river: This villain is the exact archetype of player to give the BB a walk when it’s 0.3 BBs to call and try to finish off the tournament.
Hero’s ICM chances go up to 7.0%.
Hero picks up ATo, and jams his 1.31 BBs, and Villain decides that J6o is good enough to call for the nearly 8 to 1 pot odds (he needs about 12% here to call, but then again, he only needed 19% to jam the previous hand, so who knows why he chose this one and not the last one), and Hero holds.
Hero’s ICM chances go up to 14.0%.
This was the idea: I believe that I had less than a 4.3% chance clicking call on the river and winning with my weak Q-high and blocking draws onJs7h4dTs against such a crazy, crazy passive opinion taking a betting lead after (buckle up), Hero attempted to Limp -> Min 3B Q2s on the button with 10 BBs, so I would rather take my equity in the form of spin-up-from-nothing than calling and pray for the first bluff I’ve seen out of this player, ever.*
*Yes, none of this is GTO-approved and these are my attempts to exploit a gigantic leak in a jackpot sit-and-go’s hyper-turbo, 25 BBs starting stack format.
And, eventually, it works.
The tournament goes on for another 36 hands. Hero wins 24 of them (chopping 1 as well, for the record), many of them uncontested preflop, and only a few actually getting to showdown. Further exploits are made: After Hero pulls close to even, I even start opening to 2x on the button instead of push/folding, even with only 10-15 BBs in play.
Villain did try to adjust after about 30 hands of this. On the 33rd hand after Qs2s, Villain min-raised Q6o with 4 BBs on the button, and then actually managed to call the donk jam on 976r with only 3rd pair (though he only needed 22% to call here by chip EV, this is basically a hero call for this villain).
On the 35th hand, Hero gets the crushing blow: Villain tries to, again, min raise with 5.1 BBs on the button, but Hero has Ac7c and is ready for this move the second time. Hero jams his 4.25 blinds, villain feels forced to call needing 29% for the chip EV) with K3o, and can’t fade the world on 8c3d2cQd5c, and then gets sucked out on when forced all in for 0.88 BBs in the big blind (blinds go up again, leaving only an unthinkable 9.4 BBs between both players on the table) with T7o and it can’t hold against Hero’s 75s.
To me, the lesson is clear: Radical adjustments can be utilized against radically exploitable playstyles. In the Qs2s turn spot, a jam is not the same as a call against every player, and you don’t have to flick in the call on the river if your draw misses and you have dust. There’s nothing wrong with opting to take your shot with spin-up equity versus a Q-high call, especially against the rare player who you don’t think bluffs 4% of the time.
Also, conversely, you might as well just put the player all-in if you’re considering putting them nearly all in, why leave some spin-up chances if it won’t change the proportion that you get called?
submitted by NewJMGill12 to poker [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 00:30 buddyedog 1970 Pontiac GTO Judge: Starlight Black Edition 🤤😍

1970 Pontiac GTO Judge: Starlight Black Edition 🤤😍 submitted by buddyedog to Streetoutlawsfans [link] [comments]


2024.05.07 22:47 Conscious-Dingo4463 1970. GTO 'The Judge'

1970. GTO 'The Judge' submitted by Conscious-Dingo4463 to musclecar [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 05:24 OtherwiseJacket1870 Opinion on the 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge?

Opinion on the 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge? submitted by OtherwiseJacket1870 to musclecar [link] [comments]


2024.05.02 01:16 dethdude What happened with my Porsche Carrera GT?!?

What happened with my Porsche Carrera GT?!?
Went to the cafe just to find out I don’t have it anymore (I won it with a ticket long time ago).
I didn’t sell the car and kinda proof of that is that it is still showing in my collection and in Brand Central it’s marked as acquired. It has also disappeared from my garage list.
Does anyone have a clue of what’s happening here?
submitted by dethdude to granturismo [link] [comments]


2024.04.27 03:33 TranscendentalLove Trying to create a list of 'every' classic muscle car. Can you help me? I don't have anything before 1964 or after 1974 and I'm sure there has to be some I'm missing even in that time period.

submitted by TranscendentalLove to musclecar [link] [comments]


2024.04.27 03:27 TranscendentalLove Trying to create a list of 'every' classic muscle car. Can you help me? I don't have anything before 1964 or after 1974 and I'm sure there has to be some I'm missing even in that time period.

submitted by TranscendentalLove to classiccars [link] [comments]


2024.04.20 10:18 mafiagirlsfashion Housewife highlights/Daily shit talk - April 20th, 2024

BEVERLY HILLS
Tori Spelling Thinks Andy Cohen Hasn't Asked Her to Join RHOBH 'Cause I'm Broke': 'Let’s Be Real' (People)
EXCLUSIVE: Kyle Richards, 55, WON'T be able to return to Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills unless she 'agrees to reveal her REAL relationship with Alabaman Country Singer Morgan Wade, 31' (Daily Mail)
Kyle Richards said she is 'sad' to see Crystal Kung Minkoff exit Real Housewives of Beverly Hills but 'life's great without reality television' as she debates whether to return for another season (Daily Mail)
You Have to See This Throwback Photo of Kyle Richards at Age 22 with Blonde Hair (Bravo)
Taylor Armstrong Reveals Why She'll "Always Be Close" with Kyle Richards (Bravo)
Why Sutton Stracke’s Ex-Husband Thinks She’s ‘Different’ Now (Reality Tea)
‘What a great day!’ Ex Housewives star Lisa Rinna posts snaps from Miami Beach Pride (Miami Herald)
Andy Cohen ‘Really Impressed’ by Lisa Rinna’s Fashion Industry Success (Reality Tea)
Turns Out, Garcelle Beauvais Has *This* Major Regret About Her Divorce: “Should’ve Waited" (Bravo)
Lisa Vanderpump Names ‘The Most Iconic Bravo Villains’ (Reality Tea)
POTOMAC
Nneka Ihim Teases ‘News’ About Real Housewives of Potomac Future (Reality Tea)
EXCLUSIVE: Nneka Ihim ‘Quietly Exits’ Role at Fintech Company Mentioned on RHOP (Reality Tea)
Teddi Mellencamp, Tamra Judge Praise Mia and Gordon Thornton (Reality Tea)
See Candiace Dillard Bassett's Round-Cut Engagement Ring and Matching Wedding Band (Bravo)
ORANGE COUNTY
Real Housewives of Orange County’s Jo De La Rosa Returns to Film 17 Years After Leaving Show (US)
NEW JERSEY
What Happened to Ashlee Holmes from RHONJ? She Has a "New Look" and Is a Busy Single Mom (Bravo)
Margaret Josephs Shows Off Her Latest Renovation Project: “Rome Was Not Built in [a] Day” (Bravo)
DALLAS
Tiffany Moon Teases ‘Fabulous’ Women’s Empowerment Conference (Reality Tea)
MIAMI
Guerdy Abraira Gives Update on Friendship With Larsa Pippen: ‘No Bad Blood’ (Reality Tea)
BRAVO
Scientology! Insurrection! Fired! The Real Housewives Are in Chaos (Daily Beast)
Matching Bravo Stars to Taylor Swift’s New Album’s Tracklist (Reality Tea)
A queen of reality TV opens glitzy Tahoe restaurant (San Francisco Chronicle)
Katie Maloney Shares “Wild” New Info About Laura-Leigh and Lukas Gage's Past Connection (Bravo)
Are Katie Maloney and Tori Keeth Officially Dating? (Reality Tea)
Katie Maloney Shares New Sandwich Shop Update and Slams “Scam” Rumors (Exclusive) (E!)
Vanderpump Rules’ Katie Maloney on Why Scheana is Upset With Her, Where They Stand and Lala Feud, Plus If She’d Ever Be Friends With Sandoval, and Thoughts on Schwartz’s New Girlfriend (Reality Blurb)
Katie Maloney Comments on Tom Schwartz’s New Relationship Age Gap (Reality Tea)
Tom Schwartz & Girlfriend Sophia Reveal Just How Serious They Are (It Involves the "L Word") (Bravo)
Tom Schwartz Addresses Lala and Katie’s Falling Out, Says Lala Got “Tired of Her S**t,” Plus How He Met Girlfriend Sophia Skoro & Their Age Gap (Reality Blurb)
Tom Schwartz Met Tom Sandoval on Craigslist (Reality Tea)
Why Andy Cohen ‘Connected’ With Tom Sandoval (Reality Tea)
All About Scheana Shay’s Three Engagement Rings from Brock Davies and Mike Shay (Bravo)
Brock Davies Asks Fans to ‘Love On’ Scheana Shay Amid Trolling (Reality Tea)
Ariana Madix Said These Slides Helped Her Feet Recover on ‘DWTS’ — They’re Now Her ‘Favorite’ (US)
Exclusive: Kristen Doute Reacts to ‘VPR’ Cast Flipping on Ariana Madix After Scandoval: ‘It’s Really Tough’ (Life & Style)
Ariana Madix ‘Checking in On’ Brittany Cartwright ‘Means a Lot’ (Reality Tea)
The Valley’s Brittany Cartwright Says She & Jax Were “Officially Trying” for Baby No. 2 Months Before Separation, and Shares Where She Stands With Ariana Madix Today (Reality Blurb)
Brittany Cartwright And Jax Taylor Unfollowed Each Other On Instagram (Taste of Reality)
‘The Valley’ Cast Teases Their ‘Next Chapter’ — and Who Brings the Most Drama to TV (Life & Style)
submitted by mafiagirlsfashion to RHDiscussion [link] [comments]


2024.04.20 07:23 Jae_Gabby Found my dream rats from a Craigslist listing.

Found my dream rats from a Craigslist listing.
I know we shouldn’t judge a book by it’s cover but…it’s Craigslist LOL. I’ve heard a lot of iffy things but my options started limiting themselves. I decided to check yesterday at 4 in the morning and they replied at 9AM, I ended up picking them up that same day. The people who sold them to me were AMAZINGLY sweet and so so so informative. It was such a positive and sweet experience. He told me everything I needed to know, the food they prefer at the moment (they’re 5 weeks), what kind of rats they are and about each their personalities! And coincidentally enough, the place we were supposed to meet up was close to a petco- where I decided to go inside to just take a looksie before the meet up time. I then got an email from the guy saying if it’s okay to meet at the petco, I of course say it wasn’t a problem since I was actually already there- it turned out the guy was parked right next to my boyfriend and I the whole time we got there LOLOL. Anyways super good day and I can’t wait to settle in with these guys. Their names are eeny meeny (brothers) miny (their cousin) and Moe (he’s not related). I think the couple may have more rats available, so if you’re located in Brooklyn make sure to look up “Fancy Rats” they should pop up!
To quickly add on..the rats are amazing. 😭 I got so lucky for my first time getting them 🐀 I would’ve loved these guys regardless of them being sweet, but them being curious and loving definitely helps!
submitted by Jae_Gabby to RATS [link] [comments]


2024.04.14 01:16 MTJ78Jake 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge

1969 Pontiac GTO Judge
God bless the Women’s history month forum thing for not making he spend years trying to snipe this.
submitted by MTJ78Jake to ForzaHorizon [link] [comments]


2024.04.12 17:21 Professional-Seat-98 [FH5] [W] list below [H] money

cheaper the better, and faster the better. amc javin honda nsxr gt ktm x bow gt4 lancia 037 lancia delta s4 lincoln continetal mclaren 650s spider morris mini traveler nissan safari turbo plymouth belveder polaris rzr pro xp pontiac firebird 1968 pontiac gto judge renault clio concept renault clio 2010 vauxhall lotus carlton
submitted by Professional-Seat-98 to ForzaAuctions [link] [comments]


2024.04.10 14:42 Professional-Seat-98 [FH5] [W] list below

amc javin deberti mustang dodge super bee ferrari cali t ford station wagon hdt honda nsxr gt ktm x bow gt4 lancia 037 lancia delta s4 lincoln continetal lynk&co racing maserati 8ctf mclaren 650s spider mg6 x power morris mini traveler morris minor series 2 traveller nissan safari turbo plymouth belveder polaris rzr pro xp pontiac firebird 1968 pontiac gto judge renault clio concept renault clio 2010 toyota hilux toyota sports 800 vauxhall lotus carlton
submitted by Professional-Seat-98 to ForzaAuctions [link] [comments]


http://activeproperty.pl/