
What is it? Very fast, very noisy, very red? It's a Ferrari car, you'd say. And if it's silver, it's a Mercedes. Blue is for the Bugatti and green means british stuff. It was so easy, in the old times. Old times, however, definitely got old and nobody respects them. When you look at today's motoring, you may be blinded with the new styling trend. Namely, all cars got suddenly white. What was only an asian perverse years ago, is now in fashion everywhere. It's like an avalanche of Maybachs, Ferraris, Audis and the rest, all covered with cheapest pigment on market. Once a van owner's choice, the white paint is becoming a synonime of refiness and luxury. Is it global warming, that force us to use the coolest (only in scientific meaning) colour, or we are have just ran off the imagination? The other possible and practical explanation is that on the white surface bird poos aren't so noticeable. Well, that's a solid argument. Solidly senseless. The hidden background of the pale cars phenomenon is simply a lack of any background. There's no real reason and no real need for this. Except the one. It's the money and taste of arabian millionaires; the overwhelming power of their spare cash is changing the way cars are made, tuned, purchased, offered and painted. It can be seen everywhere, because it's quite destructive. You can see the Aston Martin in the colour of dead body, Brabus is making cars that shines like a dull boy christmas toy. In the old days, the only arabian part of a car was the fuel tank's content. Through the years, the rest of a car followed. It remains somewhat of a Michael Jackson whitening story, and we all know how it finished.
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