Buy Cars and Trucks in Duluth, Minnesota

Ford : F-150 FX4 Crew Cab,  Low Miles,  Many Extras
Ford : F-150 FX4 Crew Cab, Low Miles, Many Extras
$20,600.00
$29,000.00
Time Left: 4d 8h 56m
Ford pinto 1978 ford pinto cruising wagon
Ford pinto 1978 ford pinto cruising wagon
$200.00
$2,500.00
Time Left: 6d 5h 18m

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Questions Related to duluth, minnesota cars

Provided By Y! Answers

how many days does it take for mail to get from illinois to minnesota?
Question:
How many days for a car insurance check to get from Illinois to Duluth Minnesota?


Answer:
Two days usually, three days occasionally

How far is it from Univ. of Minnesota, Twin cities to Crookston, Duluth, Morris or Rochester?
Question:
Is it far to move in an hour by car?


Answer:
4-5 hours

How much people can I drive with in the state of minnesota with a permit?
Question:
Me and my family are going on a long drive from south mn to duluth and I want to know if I can drive the car with my mom and dad(both over 21) in the car legally? Thank you!


Answer:
As long as you have a license driver 21 and over in the car your all set.

I sprayed a pedestrian with water, signs on getting away?
Question:
THere was this dude talking shit pooring pop on my car and i nailed him with water he calls cops and i dip in small corner, cops go all out search on me what are the laws on if they catch me tomorrow driving what can they do? My state is MINNESOTA , DULUTH. THnaks


Answer:
Uhhhh, you assaulted a guy w/ water??? I think you're in the clear. If you have no witnesses, then it's a case of your story against his story. And then nothing.

Government wants to install GPS in every car to tax you by the Miles you drive, is that a great IDEA or what?
Question:
If you live in Minnesota Please do not re-elect this JERK OK? I have to move far from my job because I can't afford to live close because if Real Estate prices are too high so I live 2 hours out of the city http://www.duluthnewstribune.com/event/article/id/119008/ group/home/ Late last week in Washington, U.S. Rep. Jim Oberstar touted spending half a trillion dollars to solve the nation’s transportation woes. He followed that up on Monday with a news release promising that motorists in Northeastern Minnesota “will see record levels of road construction this summer,” thanks to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Investments in infrastructure sound great. No one needs to look further than the collapsed Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis to realize our nation’s highways, bridges, rail lines and other transportation systems have been overlooked for too long. But a nagging question persists: Where will the money come from? We certainly hope we didn’t hear part of the answer yesterday when news broke that Oberstar, chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, wanted to immediately enact a mileage-based tax on cars and trucks. Whether enacted immediately or in the future, a new tax now — or anytime, really, no matter what the economy is like — would be about as welcome as hitting one of those tire-popping potholes along Glenwood Street. Taxing Americans based on the miles they drive would require a frightening amount of government intrusion. Vehicles would need to be equipped with GPS technology that could determine how many miles a car has been driven and whether the miles were logged on interstate highways or on secondary roads. Not trying to sound big-brother paranoid, but wouldn’t such technology also allow vehicles to be tracked — with the potential for a massive invasion of privacy? Oberstar spokesman Jim Berard argued that “a vehicle miles-traveled tax is a logical complement, and perhaps a future replacement, for fuel taxes.” But once both taxes are in place, does anyone seriously believe one would be eliminated in favor of the other? Especially with a “strong need [for government] to find revenue,” as Berard stated? Hard-working commuters getting to and from work would be hit hard by a mileage-based tax. Rural areas and smaller towns, including Duluth and Oberstar’s native Chisholm, also would bear the brunt. Convenient public transportation isn’t available in those places like it is in Washington or elsewhere residents can hop a subway to get around — or where a congressman can call for a driver to take him where he needs to go. Infrastructure investment is needed. No denying that. But we don’t need to spend so much that new taxes have to be created to pay for it all. The investment doesn’t have to result in record levels of road construction. And it doesn’t have to come at a cost of half a trillion dollars.


Answer:
Seems double taxation to me. We pay taxes on Gas, the more we drive the more taxes we pay on Gas. However if they get us off Gas, they are probably trying to find a waay to continue that revenue. Maybe that is the logic behind this non sense.

How can people live in the south?
Question:
Im from Duluth, MN and figured I would benefit by moving to NC so I could live year round in the warmer weather instead of hibernating up north for 9 months of the year. This is crazy down here. Ten years in NC and I cant breathe during the summer....so hot and dripping humid. Baby spiders float on the wind and leave behind a silk thread of web that wraps around your face six times a day. These silk threads go across parking lots, car to car on the streets, door to door and tree to tree in the neighborhoods, and a person who has a web around them will walk past you and you will get it again. People here are mean and not very social. Racism is at every corner.....im tired of the back and forth racial issues....blacks to whites and whites to blacks.....along with all the other ethnicity issues. I pray for a good snowfall but we usually only get ice storms. The trees freeze and fall down onto houses, persons and cars. They will frequently fall onto power lines and you wont have any power for a couple of days. If it does snow.....it melts the next freakin day. Gone.....just like that. I think Im headin back to Minnesota. I have had enough of this. At least Minnesotans are nice people. This NC crap is just a Silky Coccoon State. I MISS HOCKEY.....


Answer:


Should there be a punishment for an unbalanced budget?
Question:
Like a foreclosure on the white house? We have a 13 trillion dollar debt...with no balanced budget in sight. •$100,000 for socially conscious puppet shows in Minnesota •$2 million to build a replica railroad tourist attraction in Carson City, Nevada •$462,000 to purchase 22 concrete toilets for use in the Mark Twain National Forest in Missouri •$3.1 million to transform a canal barge into a floating museum that will travel the Erie Canal in New York •$1.5 billion for a Carbon Capturing Contest •$3.4 million to create an underground turtle tunnel, or eco-passage, in Lake Jackson, Florida. •$1 million to study the health effects of environmentally friendly public housing on 300 people in Chicago. •$983,952 for street beautification in Ann Arbor, Mich., including decorative lighting, trees, benches and bike paths •$1 million for Portland, Ore., to replace 100 aging bike lockers and build a garage that would house 250 bicycles. •$700,000 to Oregon crab fishermen to help recover lost crab post. You would think for that much money they could just go buy new ones. •$300,000 for a GPS-equipped helicopter to hunt for radioactive rabbit droppings at the Hanford nuclear reservation in Washington state. •$5 million to create a geothermal energy system for the Oak Ridge City Center shopping mall in Oak Ridge, Tenn. From TheHill.com, The main problem, is the fact the mall has been losing tenants for years and is mostly empty.” •$9.38 million to renovate a century-old train depot in Lancaster County, Pa., that has not been used for three decades.•In rural Wisconsin, 37 little-used bridges are receiving $15.8 million in stimulus funds. According to the Milwaukee Wisconsin Journal Sentinel, “The 37 bridges average 568 vehicles a day.” Some of these bridges see less than ten cars a day. •Montana received $2.2 million to install skylights in their state-run liquor warehouse. •The $800,000 given to John Murtha Airport to repave a back runway. This airport services a whopping 20 passengers a day and has, over the past decade, already received millions in federal funds. Representative John Murtha treats this as his private airport and has spared no expense. •$1 million was given to a Chicago dinner cruise company to “combat terrorism” •The Coast Guard gets $572 million to create 1,235 new jobs. This comes to $460,000 per job. •$30 million for a spring training baseball complex for the Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies and $11 million for Microsoft to build a bridge connecting its two headquarter campuses in Redmond, Wash., which are separated by a highway. Instead of taking our money, why isn’t Bill Gates helping with a solution? •$1.15 million to install a guardrail for a persistently dry lake bed in Guymon, Okla. •$2.5 million in stimulus checks sent to the deceased •$6 million for a snow-making facility in Duluth, Minn. •Every project gets its own $300 road sign claiming: “This project was paid for by stimulus money.” Come on Frank...let the war go...right or wrong the world is a safer place now than it was before Saddam.


Answer:
we've had a national debt since 1820's. the only time we had a balanced budget, that i remember, is under clinton late in his presidency. furthermore, of all those states you mentioned - break it down to red/blue, or punish those who took money for pet projects.

What person in their right mind would Approve ANY of these things?
Question:
•$100,000 for socially conscious puppet shows in Minnesota •$2 million to build a replica railroad tourist attraction in Carson City, Nevada •$462,000 to purchase 22 concrete toilets for use in the Mark Twain National Forest in Missouri •$3.1 million to transform a canal barge into a floating museum that will travel the Erie Canal in New York •$1.5 billion for a Carbon Capturing Contest •$3.4 million to create an underground turtle tunnel, or eco-passage, in Lake Jackson, Florida. •$1 million to study the health effects of environmentally friendly public housing on 300 people in Chicago. •$983,952 for street beautification in Ann Arbor, Mich., including decorative lighting, trees, benches and bike paths •$1 million for Portland, Ore., to replace 100 aging bike lockers and build a garage that would house 250 bicycles. •$700,000 to Oregon crab fishermen to help recover lost crab post. You would think for that much money they could just go buy new ones. •$300,000 for a GPS-equipped helicopter to hunt for radioactive rabbit droppings at the Hanford nuclear reservation in Washington state. •$5 million to create a geothermal energy system for the Oak Ridge City Center shopping mall in Oak Ridge, Tenn. From TheHill.com, The main problem, is the fact the mall has been losing tenants for years and is mostly empty.” •$9.38 million to renovate a century-old train depot in Lancaster County, Pa., that has not been used for three decades.•In rural Wisconsin, 37 little-used bridges are receiving $15.8 million in stimulus funds. According to the Milwaukee Wisconsin Journal Sentinel, “The 37 bridges average 568 vehicles a day.” Some of these bridges see less than ten cars a day. •Montana received $2.2 million to install skylights in their state-run liquor warehouse. •The $800,000 given to John Murtha Airport to repave a back runway. This airport services a whopping 20 passengers a day and has, over the past decade, already received millions in federal funds. Representative John Murtha treats this as his private airport and has spared no expense. •$1 million was given to a Chicago dinner cruise company to “combat terrorism” •The Coast Guard gets $572 million to create 1,235 new jobs. This comes to $460,000 per job. •$30 million for a spring training baseball complex for the Arizona Diamondbacks and Colorado Rockies and $11 million for Microsoft to build a bridge connecting its two headquarter campuses in Redmond, Wash., which are separated by a highway. Instead of taking our money, why isn’t Bill Gates helping with a solution? •$1.15 million to install a guardrail for a persistently dry lake bed in Guymon, Okla. •$2.5 million in stimulus checks sent to the deceased •$6 million for a snow-making facility in Duluth, Minn. •Every project gets its own $300 road sign claiming: “This project was paid for by stimulus money.”


Answer:
Hopefully this will change now that we have a new House Speaker.