Million Dollar RVs



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE"
Date: 15 Oct 2005 09:07:28 PM
Object: Million Dollar RVs
People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9663942/
McMansions on wheels
Million-dollar RVs are luring the wealthy
Updated: 4:46 p.m. ET Oct. 15, 2005
Paula and George Luttrell typically vacation in surroundings as
sumptuous as a Four Seasons hotel. There's a big difference, though:
Their accommodations are on wheels. The real estate developers from
Chattanooga, Tenn., travel around in a 45-foot recreational vehicle
that has marble steps, five closets, a queen-size bed, a full-size
refrigerator, and front and rear 48-inch plasma TVs. Plus, two
motorized "slideouts" expand the living area by as much as 30 inches
to 11.5 feet, when the RV is parked.
The Luttrells — she's 37, he's 47 — are part of a thriving high-end RV
culture. Contrary to RVs' blue-collar image — and undeterred by
soaring gasoline prices — a growing number of executives (including
Liberty Media CEO John Malone), doctors, and other professionals
prefer to spend their leisure time in coaches that sell for $1 million
to $2 million and have interior appointments reminiscent of old-style
Pullman cars. Many owners also tow "toy haulers" behind their RVs —
trailers that carry cars, his-and-her motorcycles, golf carts, or
motorized Segways.
These RVers may spend nights in campgrounds or Wal-Mart parking lots
along with the rest of the camper crowd. But their final destination
is often a gated RV resort — complete with spa, tennis courts, and
pools — in popular vacation spots such as Palm Springs, Calif.; Hilton
Head, S.C.; and Naples, Fla., where per-night rates range from $30 to
$80. But many RV owners buy lots in these resorts so they can park
their rigs for extended stays. At a typical size of 40 feet by 100
feet, this is pricey real estate. Jim Howell, 75, a retired car dealer
from Carlisle, Pa., paid $84,000 for his lot at a park near Naples a
few years ago and says it's now worth more than $200,000.
This is an elite group. Only about 325 RVs with million-dollar-plus
price tags are bought annually by private individuals, figures Karl
Blade, owner of Newell Coach, a Miami (Okla.) maker of luxury RVs. A
smaller number are leased or purchased by touring entertainers, NASCAR
drivers, and others. The biggest makers, such as Marathon Coach in
Coburg, Ore., Chicago's Liberty Coach, and Newell say sales are
holding up this year. But as a 200-gallon diesel-fuel fill-up
approaches $600, smaller players are feeling the pinch. Monaco Coach,
in Coburg, Ore., recently decided to close its faltering
million-dollar RV business.
Longer term, the industry is riding powerful trends. Soon well-heeled
baby boomers will be retiring in droves, while fears about terrorism
have made flying and overseas vacationing less attractive. "Unless
fuel is rationed, I don't think it will have much of an effect," says
Frank X. Konigseder, a vice-president at Liberty Coach. Sure, luxury
RVs get only six to eight miles per gallon, but most owners put fewer
than 10,000 miles on them annually. In any case, says Jim Neely, who
owns Memphis' Interstate Bar-B-Que Restaurants and drives a Newell RV:
"If you can't afford to spend a couple thousand dollars on fuel during
a trip, you shouldn't own one."
(snip)
.

User: "Dan J.S."

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 01:15:54 PM
"laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE" <xeton2001@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:26d3l1t862snh2mrtf8qsoq06qheomn229@4ax.com...


People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.

Unless something changed, and we live in a socialist country, if someone can
afford it, they should have it. This is the driver behind capitalism. If you
dont like it, move to France or Germany, or worse, Norway.
.

User: "Ted waddya mean you are pregnant and can not swim Kennedy"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 08:40:59 PM
On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 02:07:28 GMT, laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE
<xeton2001@yahoo.com> was understood to have stated the following:


People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.

It must suck to be so pathetic that you'll never be able to own one of
these. Of course, that rusted out trailer you live in can be mobile if
need be. Just wait for a good tornado and/or repo man.
.

User: "The Laura Bush Murdered Her Boyfriend Blade"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 16 Oct 2005 11:23:55 PM
laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE:

People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.

So the ***** what? Its THEIR money. They WORKED for it (I know that is a
foreign concept to you). If an RV makes them happy, then so fucking be
it, you red-bag *****.

.
User: "earthage2002"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 12:22:34 AM
"The Laura Bush Murdered Her Boyfriend Blade"
<the_blade@the_mouth_of_Laura_Bush_Murdered_Her_Boyfriend.*****> wrote in
message news:MPG.1dbcf16a32e699429896bf@newsgroups.bellsouth.net...

laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE:


People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.


So the ***** what? Its THEIR money. They WORKED for it (I know that is a
foreign concept to you). If an RV makes them happy, then so fucking be
it, you red-bag *****.


http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/auto/car-guide-2004/madden1.asp
John Madden: America's biggest commuter
By Paul Bannister . Bankrate.com
Sportscaster John Madden has not boarded a plane since 1979, but
crisscrosses the nation weekly during the football season covering "NFL
Monday Night Football" for ABC-TV.
His transport isn't Amtrak or Greyhound. It's the ultimate SUV -- an
$800,000, 45-foot luxury coach fitted with everything from sauna to gourmet
galley.
Madden, 67, works, sleeps and eats as he covers 80,000 miles annually --
almost all of it between September and January -- across America's
interstate highways.
Here's a peek at the highway lifestyle of America's best-known "road
warrior."
The Madden Cruiser rolls out of the commentator's upscale, gated Blackhawk
development near Oakland for a routine, 53-hour transcontinental trek to New
York for a Monday Night Football assignment.
"Turn off your mind for 50 hours," says Madden, comfortable in golf shirt
and sweat pants.
He's a high-temperature guy who has the best winning record of any football
coach from his days with the Oakland Raiders. He once patrolled the
sidelines of wintry Soldier Field, Chicago in his shirtsleeves, so it's no
surprise that he sets the cabin's climate control at a chilly 60 degrees.
The three flat-screen plasma televisions are tracking different stations by
satellite and an ABC staffer is working at a laptop computer that's
up-linked to Madden's Goal Line Productions office back in Pleasanton,
Calif.
The Cruiser is a rolling command post, with high-speed Internet access,
multiple TVs, a navigation system, cell phones and a fax all in satellite
contact with the outside world.
"We don't stop any more to set up a satellite dish or make a phone call,"
says agent Sandy Montag. "We don't need to. We keep rolling. It used to be
that we didn't use the satellite very much because we had to stop to set it
up.
"We don't like to stop, and we have rules. We don't wait for anyone, we go
1,000 miles on a tank of diesel and we finish any bottle of water we start."
Sockless, despite the on-board chill, Madden takes a slug of his 48-ounce
water bottle.
"I used to get on the airplane, then I'd get off the airplane. I'd go to the
hotel and the stadium, then back to the airplane. I traveled all over, but I
didn't see anything. Now, I do," he says in that familiar, confiding voice.
It was back in 1979 that the poster child for the claustrophobic,
fear-of-flying set had what he described as "a full-blown panic attack" when
about to fly out of Tampa.
"It wasn't about flying, bad turbulence or anything. The flight attendant
closed the door and before we'd even moved I knew I had to get off the
plane, but I gutted it out. You think you're going to die. I was sweating,
shaking, the whole thing.
"It was about being encased and not being able to get out."
Madden landed, turned in his frequent flier card, and grounded himself
forever.
First, he tried Amtrak, but when trains didn't go where he wanted, he hired
a motor coach. Soon, he traded promotional appearances for a custom
Greyhound and boarded the first Madden Cruiser.
Today, he's on his fourth, an E4500 Entertainer made by Motor Coach
Industries of Schaumburg, Ill., and complete with bedroom (the queen-sized
air mattress is set at 'firm'), guest bunks and polished granite-topped
galley with a double oven, electric stove and side-by-side fridge.
A generator big enough to power a 5,000-square-foot house powers it all.
There's also a high-tech office, two bathrooms and an extra- large steam
shower and sauna -- everything finished in rosewood and glove leather.
The luxury-suite-on-wheels comes courtesy of a promotional agreement with
Outback Steakhouse, and Madden makes a point of visiting as many of the
1,000 U.S. outlets as he can during his odysseys. After nine years with the
company, he guesses he's half way through the list.
But he still loves the greasy-spoon diners, back-road barbecue cafes and
home-cooking food joints he finds on America's highways.
"I like to go into small towns and find a new place. In Mississippi, I've
got a seafood place I go to," he says. "In Van Horn, Texas, it's Chuy's. We
always call ahead and Mama Chuy makes a chicken dish with beans and rice,
and she makes her own tortillas.
"In California, in Los Banos on Interstate Highway 5, our first stop is the
Woolgrowers, a Basque restaurant. In Georgia, there's a place called The
Georgia Pig, that's just barbecue."
Madden wanders back to his office, scans the TV screens and starts reading
sports reports, readying for his work at the Giants' game.
Madden's longtime drivers, Willie Yarbrough and Joe Mitchell, are always at
the controls of the Cruiser. It's 13 feet high, weighs 45,000 pounds, has a
200-gallon fuel tank and gets about six miles per gallon.
Operating costs aren't discussed, but industry insiders say a luxury coach
like this rents for $450 a day plus fuel, maintenance, insurance and driver
salaries. A few other odds and ends help push the cost well over a dollar a
mile, or say $4,000 for a one-way, cross-country trip.
That's small change for Madden, who's reputed to make about $40 million a
year from his broadcasting, video games and Ace Hardware and Outback
Steakhouse endorsements.
"If it's a short trip, say from New York to Philadelphia, the bus is full, a
rolling party," says Montag. "But when it's all the way across country, New
York to San Francisco, there's usually about three people aboard."
A rolling command post has its virtues, as well as being a people mover,
Montag says.
"In San Diego the other week, the NFL announced at 7 p.m. on Sunday that the
San Diego-Miami game would be moved to Arizona because of wildfires in
California. By 7.30 p.m., John was on the Cruiser headed for Tempe.
"They arrived at 3.30 a.m., Monday and a few hours later were ready to
broadcast!"
Back on Sept. 11 when the World Trade Center towers were attacked, Madden
was in New York, where he has an apartment. The football game was canceled
and he readied himself for a trip back to California.
His management group called to say that flight cancellations had left ice
queen Peggy Fleming stranded in Pennsylvania and could John give her a ride
back to her Los Gatos, Calif., home?
Big John collected the Olympic legend and as they drove through Nebraska,
they stopped at a small store near Omaha to buy American flags for the bus.
"The guy couldn't believe that Peggy Fleming and John Madden had just walked
in. He begged: 'As you leave town, drive by the store and honk at me!'"
As the Cruiser rolls east across the Sierra Nevada on Interstate Highway 80,
Madden retreats to his bedroom for a nap. Even the queen-sized bed is
special; it has an air mattress from Select Comfort that the manufacturer
scrambled to fit.
"John heard about the air mattress, tried it and liked it," says Chuck
Dorsey, president of the Minneapolis sleep company.
"The problem was coordinating its installation in the Cruiser, as it's on
the road all the time."
A crew contacted the bus somewhere in Wyoming and when Madden arrived for
playoffs in the Twin Cities, workers took out the innerspring and installed
the new air bed while the game went on.
Dawn comes up as the Cruiser passes the Black Hills, and Madden is on the
intercom, asking the driver, "Where are we?"
Truckers on the interstate recognize the red-and-yellow rig and radio in to
ask driver Yarbrough where Madden's headed, what game he's doing.
By midafternoon, already through the Rockies with sightings of antelope,
wild horses and prairie dogs, there's a stop for fuel. The bus is in
Nebraska, roughly half way, and Madden takes a 15-minute walk.
He doesn't seek it, but he is quickly recognized as "The Football Guy"' or
"The Ace Hardware Guy." Sometimes, people give him pies or fried chicken.
Mostly, they greet him and say how they enjoy listening to his commentaries.
He's friendly, outgoing, approachable, but he's soon back on the bus.
There's no exercise equipment on the Cruiser. Madden considered putting a
treadmill on board, but it was too big.
"For me, it has to be industrial size," he sighs.
The drivers grab several local newspapers. Madden, after a steam shower and
sauna, downloads other reports from the Internet and starts to do homework
as the bus rolls through thickening traffic south of Chicago.
"I'm not a journalist, I'm not an actor. I'm a football coach doing
television," he says. "It's fun. It's my life, my passion. I'll do it as
long as I can."
Madden's driver stays far south of Lake Michigan and skirts I-80 -- a
standing order, as the highway invariably seems to have construction delays.
Then, it's through the fall foliage of Indiana and Pennsylvania.
Madden, lolling in the front seat with his feet on the windshield, nods at
the colors.
"People pay money to see scenes like this," he says. "You only get to see
America driving through places like Nebraska for eight hours.
"This is seeing our country. I've always said a congressman should ride
across country. Not drive, because you can't see when you drive, you have to
ride. You have to be a witness to America."
It's Friday afternoon, and the Cruiser is touching down, pulling into
Manhattan. Madden will sleep at his apartment, ready himself for Monday
night's analysis and banter, ride the brightly-painted Cruiser to Giants'
stadium and greet a throng of eager fans.
Game over, he'll snack, shower and sleep on the bus as it threads its way
out of the city and starts again to cross the huge spaces of America's
heartland. He'll travel from stadium to shining stadium, from Mile High to
Lambeau, Qualcomm to Candlestick. It's all in a season's work for the
coast-to-coast commuter.
-- Posted: Dec. 9, 2003
.

User: "Laura Bush murdered her boy friend"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 16 Oct 2005 11:56:42 PM
The Laura Bush Murdered Her Boyfriend Blade wrote:

laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE:


People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.


So the ***** what? Its THEIR money. They WORKED for it (I know that is a
foreign concept to you). If an RV makes them happy, then so fucking be
it, you red-bag *****.

What makes you think they worked for it? Most rich people are born to
wealth like your god bush. He's got millions but has never had a real
job in his life.
.
User: ""

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 04:34:42 AM
<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>
And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.
.
User: "Bo Raxo"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 10:27:19 AM
<DedNdogYrs@AOL.com> wrote in message
news:1129541682.910380.167950@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.

Go google up the demographics. Far more people are born in to wealth than
acquire it on their own.
.
User: ""

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 11:16:45 AM
Bo Raxo wrote:

<DedNdogYrs@AOL.com> wrote in message
news:1129541682.910380.167950@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.


Go google up the demographics. Far more people are born in to wealth than
acquire it on their own.

And some people have, in fact, worked all their lives and use the RV
after retirement to go to and to stay in places otherwise out of their
range.
yD
.
User: "earthage2002"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 12:33:44 PM
<yaffadina2@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1129565805.376454.179050@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...


Bo Raxo wrote:

<DedNdogYrs@AOL.com> wrote in message
news:1129541682.910380.167950@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.


Go google up the demographics. Far more people are born in to wealth
than
acquire it on their own.


And some people have, in fact, worked all their lives and use the RV
after retirement to go to and to stay in places otherwise out of their
range.
yD

But whatever they didn't pay for a hotel room, they made up for it in what
they paid for gas.
.
User: "Kris Baker"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 12:42:56 PM
"earthage2002" <earthage2002@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1129570436.149c266776b57981c096448a59d7779f@teranews...


<yaffadina2@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1129565805.376454.179050@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...


Bo Raxo wrote:

<DedNdogYrs@AOL.com> wrote in message
news:1129541682.910380.167950@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.


Go google up the demographics. Far more people are born in to wealth
than
acquire it on their own.


And some people have, in fact, worked all their lives and use the RV
after retirement to go to and to stay in places otherwise out of their
range.
yD


But whatever they didn't pay for a hotel room, they made up for it in what
they paid for gas.

.....but most aren't out driving *every* day. The big units (and I'm
including the large fifth-wheel trailers, which we're looking at) are
designed as residences more than vehicles. You either tow a car behind an
RV, or get a trailer and use the truck. Only John Madden could afford to
drive that far every day; the rest of us would have to drive a day, then
park for a week ;)
There's also the issue that you're able to take your own (good) food with
you, rather than depending on greasy spoons and fast food. For instance,
the ONLY good "real" meal we had two weeks ago, when we went down to Capitol
Reef National Park, cost us $87.41 for two (with one beer, one margarita).
Our hotel was $109 a night (three nights)...and our food came to another
$325. That's $652 in expenses that we could have cut down to less than
$100, if we'd had an RV and stayed in the park (or stayed in one of the RV
parks for about $20-$25 a night). We were less than 300 miles from home.
Kris
.

User: ""

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 02:45:47 PM
earthage2002 wrote:

<yaffadina2@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1129565805.376454.179050@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...


Bo Raxo wrote:

<DedNdogYrs@AOL.com> wrote in message
news:1129541682.910380.167950@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.


Go google up the demographics. Far more people are born in to wealth
than
acquire it on their own.


And some people have, in fact, worked all their lives and use the RV
after retirement to go to and to stay in places otherwise out of their
range.
yD


But whatever they didn't pay for a hotel room, they made up for it in what
they paid for gas.

Maybe, it would depend on the price of the hotel room, but they get to
travel a lot, save on meals too. And I know from the photos and
postcards I get that America sure is a beautiful country.
yD
.
User: "Daniel J. Stern"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 09:48:26 PM
On Mon, 17 Oct 2005,
wrote:

Maybe, it would depend on the price of the hotel room, but they get to
travel a lot, save on meals too. And I know from the photos and
postcards I get that America sure is a beautiful country.

It surely is a lot of different kinds of beautiful.
Shame about the ugly Americans.
.
User: "Kris Baker"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 18 Oct 2005 10:13:54 AM
"Daniel J. Stern" <dastern@127.0.0.1> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.63.0510172248040.24919@alumni.engin.umich.edu...

On Mon, 17 Oct 2005,

wrote:

Maybe, it would depend on the price of the hotel room, but they get to
travel a lot, save on meals too. And I know from the photos and
postcards I get that America sure is a beautiful country.


It surely is a lot of different kinds of beautiful.

Shame about the ugly Americans.

Then you should leave.
Buh-bye.
Kris
.






User: "Laura Bush murdered her boy friend"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 11:07:44 AM
wrote:

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.

Even those super-rich who "worked" for their money had unproductive
jobs. They are atheletes or entertainers or corporate CEOs or
politicians. We have social parasites on both ends of the economic
spectrum.
.
User: "Larry Bud"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 11:15:12 AM
Laura Bush murdered her boy friend wrote:

DedNdogYrs@AOL.com wrote:

<Most rich people are born to wealth.......>

And you get this information where? Out of all the people I have ever
known who had money the vast majority went to college and worked for
it. Some did both; inherited money and used it to buy a business and
make a lot more.


Even those super-rich who "worked" for their money had unproductive
jobs. They are atheletes or entertainers or corporate CEOs or
politicians. We have social parasites on both ends of the economic
spectrum.

Pure jealousy on your part.
An athelete who earned $10 million a year is making money for others,
otherwise he wouldn't earn that much. "Parasite" is hardly an apt
description when nobody was forced to pay him that amount.
Just because nobody thinks your sorry ***** is worth more than a couple
of bucks an hour doesn't make everybody else who earns more than you do
a parasite.
.
User: "JohnH"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 03:13:53 PM

Even those super-rich who "worked" for their money had unproductive
jobs. They are atheletes or entertainers or corporate CEOs or
politicians. We have social parasites on both ends of the economic
spectrum.


Pure jealousy on your part.

An athelete who earned $10 million a year is making money for others,
otherwise he wouldn't earn that much. "Parasite" is hardly an apt
description when nobody was forced to pay him that amount.

Just because nobody thinks your sorry ***** is worth more than a couple
of bucks an hour doesn't make everybody else who earns more than you
do a parasite.

And I suppose you think Judy's not a troll either ;^)
.
User: "Larry Bud"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 07:38:19 PM
JohnH wrote:

Even those super-rich who "worked" for their money had unproductive
jobs. They are atheletes or entertainers or corporate CEOs or
politicians. We have social parasites on both ends of the economic
spectrum.


Pure jealousy on your part.

An athelete who earned $10 million a year is making money for others,
otherwise he wouldn't earn that much. "Parasite" is hardly an apt
description when nobody was forced to pay him that amount.

Just because nobody thinks your sorry ***** is worth more than a couple
of bucks an hour doesn't make everybody else who earns more than you
do a parasite.


And I suppose you think Judy's not a troll either ;^)

No, Judy's a nutcase.
A troll is someone who posts a message for the sole purpose to inflame
or to those an idea out so outrageous as to "catch", ie. trolling for
fish. While the nutcase's posts do inflame often, she really believes
what she says.
.
User: "Paul."

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 08:14:33 PM
On 17 Oct 2005 17:38:19 -0700, Larry Bud <larrybud2002@yahoo.com> said
the following in rec.autos.driving...

No, Judy's a nutcase.

A troll is someone who posts a message for the sole purpose to inflame
or to those an idea out so outrageous as to "catch", ie. trolling for
fish. While the nutcase's posts do inflame often, she really believes
what she says.

My opinion of a troll has been someone who trolls the group once or maybe
twice, gets its laughs and then moves on. Judy's just a k00k.
--
Paul.
Self appointed unofficial overseer
of kooks and trolls in rec.autos.driving
and eternal roamer of the dark side of
usenet #6.659 (gas price of the beast).
.




User: "Paul."

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 18 Oct 2005 07:04:01 AM
On 17 Oct 2005 09:07:44 -0700, Laura Bush murdered her boy friend
<xeton2001@yahoo.com> said the following in rec.autos.driving...

Even those super-rich who "worked" for their money had unproductive
jobs. They are atheletes or entertainers o

<PAF>
Quiet, Ko0k!!1!!!!
.



User: "Larry Bud"

Title: Re: Million Dollar RVs 17 Oct 2005 11:13:17 AM
Laura Bush murdered her boy friend wrote:

The Laura Bush Murdered Her Boyfriend Blade wrote:

laura bush - VEHICULAR HOMICIDE:


People that drive these 10 ton tanks are a menace to all the patriotic
americans driving small vehicles. And that's why they're popular.


So the ***** what? Its THEIR money. They WORKED for it (I know that is a
foreign concept to you). If an RV makes them happy, then so fucking be
it, you red-bag *****.


What makes you think they worked for it? Most rich people are born to
wealth like your god bush. He's got millions but has never had a real
job in his life.

If there's one politician you CAN'T claim not having a real job is
Bush. Until being govenor, he was in the private sector.
.




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