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Lounge
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https://www.yenko.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=87)
Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 02:18 AM |
https://i.postimg.cc/Px7skFqH/tu.jpg
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You know, we Americans are odd. When things come out we gotta have it, we get tired of it quickly, we throw it away and then 20 years later we scream, “Oh, oh, I need one of those,” and then we pay ten times the price (laughs).
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It’s very funny because nobody can really predict. When I was a kid they said the Mustang would never be a collectible car because they made a million of them of the first year and a half. So there are so many of them nobody will collect them. Well that’s precisely the reason they did because everybody has a memory of them.
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I’ve never sold a car. Once a year we will donate a car to Wounded Warriors, firefighters, Make a Wish Foundation or something like that… But I really don’t feel the need to sell any.
You can have the shiny thing that makes noise or you can have a bag of green paper. I would rather have the shiny thing that makes noise.
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 03:10 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/Bb9gk5Bn/BBXtmty.jpg
A meat-eating dinosaur that was one of the last to walk Earth replaced its teeth as often as modern sharks do, scientists have discovered. Majungasaurus, which lived between 66 and 70 million years ago, was found to grow new teeth about once every two months. That is up to 13 times faster than some other carnivorous dinosaurs, such as Tyrannosaurus Rex, which took about two years to grow new teeth.
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 03:11 PM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 03:14 PM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 03:16 PM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 03:25 PM |
https://i.postimg.cc/fk4RxysF/157471...em-R187t-L.jpg
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Don’t let the flash of gold fool you; the Sea-Dweller is as robust as they come, able to survive depths of 4000 feet
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The only way I see one of these standing up to it's rating is if you accidentally dropped yours over the side of your boat in 4000 feet of water. And if you did, how are you going to retrieve it? BTW - the one shown costs $18,000.
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 10:30 PM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-29-2019 11:07 PM |
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Lee Stewart |
11-30-2019 08:22 AM |
https://i.postimg.cc/xC5Sz0Y3/iu.jpg
A Utah businessman paid $1.32 million for a dime last week at a Chicago coin auction.
It wasn't just any 10-cent piece; the 1894-S Barber Dime is one of only 24 that were ever made, according to Stack's Bowers Galleries, which held the auction Thursday night.
Only nine of the coins are confirmed to still exist.
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Lee Stewart |
11-30-2019 10:34 AM |
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