This is the car that gave Communism a bad name. Powered by a two-stroke 
pollution generator that maxed out at an ear-splitting 18 hp, the 
Trabant was a hollow lie of a car constructed of recycled worthlessness 
(actually, the body was made of a fiberglass-like Duroplast, reinforced 
with recycled fibers like cotton and wood). A virtual antique when it 
was designed in the 1950s, the Trabant was East Germany's answer to the 
VW Beetle — a "people's car," as if the people didn't have enough to 
worry about. Trabants smoked like an Iraqi oil fire, when they ran at 
all, and often lacked even the most basic of amenities, like brake 
lights or turn signals. But history has been kind to the Trabi. 
Thousands of East Germans drove their Trabants over the border when the 
Wall fell, which made it a kind of automotive liberator. Once across the
 border, the none-too-sentimental Ostdeutschlanders immediately 
abandoned their cars. Ich bin Junk!
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