This has to be at least the tenth time I have seen this discussion on this forum so far, almost as many times as "What is Overlanding". I almost have to laugh. I stop at the gas station or while at work I have to listen to people cop an attitude because I have a nicer vehicle than them or they perceive I have more fun then them. Then I hang around with other Jeepers and hear "that's not a real Jeep because . . ." (you fill in the blank with what ever you like because I have heard just about all of them, right down to color). I think what gets me the most is listening to other overlanders pull the same "you're not a real Overlander because . . .". The long and short of it is, in each case its one person trying to tear the other person down because they perceive the other is better or has better stuff than themself. Its simple jealousy. Yes, I have a very capable Jeep. I have a total of $60,000 invested in it. Why? Because that is what my wife and I want, and we worked our fricken asses off to get it. Everyone seems to forget that part, no one gave it to us just like no one gave stuff to most of the other Overlanders out there. They worked for it. Am I an elitist? I don't really care. To me, an Overlander is someone who takes what they have, makes the best of it, and does what brings the most enjoyment while improving them self. If you worked to get what you have, be proud of it instead of making excuses. Being proud of it means not trying to put others down because they have better stuff. See what they have, how they have set up their rig, find the things that will make your life better, then go work for it. Ok, you may have an old Dodge pickup but if it works for you, own it. As far as the Overlanding part. To each his own. I don't consider camping out in the woods in the same spot for a week to be Overlanding but I don't go around trying to tell people they are not Overlanders because they don't comply with my Overland style. You have your way of Overlanding, leave it at that. Ok, so you aren't a global traveler. Are you retired? Do you have a kid or kids? Do you need that job to get better gear? What is the issue, you are just like the other 90% of Overlanders out there. No, I am not going to doing any global travel but I can certainly learn a few things from these people. I don't want to imply I sit around watching Youtube and develop a fan obsession for "Youtube Stars", there aren't many out there on Youtube who I have any respect for. I mean, I haven't seen too many on there that have quit their job and sold everything to travel the world on an old bike. I don't recall any on their who stopped their travels across Africa to work for a week or two in order to have enough money to continue their travels. These are the people I respect, the people who have very little, worked their ass off for it, and made it happen. The people I respect are hard to find out about because they rather spend their time traveling and meeting new and different people than hanging out on Youtube trying to be famous. Saying people are elitist doesn't make you a better Overlander, or person, and those you are calling that don't really care. So, why not focus your time on bettering yourself instead of trying to tear others down.