Founder
It's 7-hours to get to Ukraine's western border. 7-more just to make the crossing. Another 1000 kilometers to get to Dnipro...
... and then we get to turn around and do it all again.
Home or on the road, if it's broke then this is who fixes it.
A veteran of the second gulf war, a participant in the US Navy's humanitarian efforts in Indonesia following the 2004 tsunami, an aircraft mechanic, and father of two. Before the war, I was about as ordinary as you could get.
Fed a steady diet of 1980's television, my heroes always included the vehicles that made heroic feats possible. The A-Team van, KITT from "Knight Rider", and even the Mach-5...
With their drivers at the helm, they could change the world just by driving faster, longer, and better than the evil they were chasing (and "good" always triumphed). The Toyota 4-Wheel Drive has always been my "hero car". When you put the two of us together, we become more than just the sum of our parts. Together we're unstoppable.
Staying home was never an option. I don't think any of us expected this level of involvement, but when we saw the children sheltering in subway tunnels from aerial bombardment, when we saw theaters full of children hit by missile strikes, when we saw parents being shelled while fleeing with their families through humanitarian channels, there was never a possibility that we could stay home and do nothing.
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