Bonesjones
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2021
Sounds like something a soy-merican would admit.I'm not nearly poor enough or addicted to meth enough to do sheetrock you fucking beaner.
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Sounds like something a soy-merican would admit.I'm not nearly poor enough or addicted to meth enough to do sheetrock you fucking beaner.
Zero percent chance that he's the breadwinner. He buys organic brown eggs (at ACME) with the egg crisis still ongoing and ACME's slightly higher-than-average prices that's $6 a carton, yet still lets them dangle off the edge of the bag (notice the egg carton on the right is one hard bump from falling out) and other pricey items, but that's poor buying habits. If he went car-free but still had a job he would almost certainly need to utilize SEPTA's service on the daily, which there's no proof of (and would have to walk or lock up the bike).How someone fucks up that hard at that age and still lives with their father baffles me. Unless he is taking care of an elderly relative, which I doubt as it's probably the other way around, it makes me question how someone wound up in that state.
Exactly, the "why not small trucks" is an example of motte-and-bailey bullshit. You see these photos of loading an air conditioner or a bunch of lumber on a bicycle and these retards take it 100% seriously. You think they'll ever give up on "winning"?No, I mean that's a rhetorical question I already know why urabnists specifically complain about this and it's not because they actually have some vested interest in the benefit of the blue collar worker. Their obsession with trucks is because they look for any talking point to say the driver is not a real man for driving anything with any luxuries at all. They have no interest in returning trucks to the good ole days, they would rather ban you from having a truck at all. Believe me once the F-150s are gone they will still complain about your small truck.
A lot of European and Asian cities were built in an era before vehicles and logistics. Georges-Eugène Haussmann did a lot to rebuild Paris and modernize its infrastructure (notably adding aqueducts, sewers, and parks, besides wide boulevards) but those sorts of projects require money and enormous political power. To urbanists, these are features and not bugs.This is a big one though. If you've seen the parking garages or tight streets there are in older cities (asia and europe especially) you'd wish you had a smaller truck. One thing kei trucks are exceptionally good at: going down old and narrow alleys that feel like they're one and a half meters wide.
I've explained before that there are bars literally everywhere if you just want to drink (and have a bartender). But urbanists, while they have outed themselves as alcoholics, are somehow too good to settle for strip mall Mexican restaurants and inexpensive hotel bars. You can sneer at Applebee's all you want but the same Bloody Marys and mozzarella sticks are going to be available anywhere else at a 90% markup.Imagine going to a hipster bar to drink if you can just use your car. Heated seats, good music, and you can always make another round to the gas station for more booze.
Total cityslicker biker death.
Our bike-loving Redditor friend is firmly established as being a complete loser but the exact circumstances of why he doesn't have a car is shrouded in mystery. He buys a lot of Coca-Cola and jokes about being a "Coke addict", so it's plausible that he switched to sugar water as a way to stay clean from drinking, with the car being lost from an alcohol-induced wreck or arrest. However, that's all speculation.I'm all for riding bikes around the city, it's nice in summer and spring, but fall and winter sucks for it. If you think that a cargo bike can replace a car, you are either stupid or coping with being unable to drive.
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Crux of the issue right there. The city listened to the people who actually lived and worked in the area and not some faggot cyclists who barely used it.Despite the lack of formal public notice or engagement prior to the start of construction, Marlene Gafrick, the advisor on mobility and transportation issues for Houston Mayor John Whitmire, said "the community’s voice is crucial in the Austin Street bike lane project."
"We’ve received feedback from those directly affected," Gafrick wrote. "Some have noted the removal of residential street parking and trash container collection areas, as well as the blockage of a fire station’s training area. Houston Fire has confirmed that the department suspended some training due to the bike lanes."
You already brought it up, but I would like to add that Paris Baguette, from the experience of my friend (went to two of them in Korea) and I (went to one in the USA), is very much a pastry store as well. Usually they sell sweet stuff (e.g. donuts, bread with chocolate, macarons, etc.). I think the most "bakery"-like thing you can buy in there is croissants.When you search "bakery" in Paris, the two most central bakeries are outposts of a Korean chain:
[...]
From poking around on Google, most of the "bakeries" there primarily sell pastries and coffee, not bread. They may offer bread, but most of their inventory is sweet.
At Tous Les Jours (went there a few weeks ago on a day trip to Houston), they had a "loaf" (about 6" cubed) of their "milk bread" which is super-sweet and super-soft. And you thought regular American bread was too sweet and soft.You already brought it up, but I would like to add that Paris Baguette, from the experience of my friend (went to two of them in Korea) and I (went to one in the USA), is very much a pastry store as well. Usually they sell sweet stuff (e.g. donuts, bread with chocolate, macarons, etc.). I think the most "bakery"-like thing you can buy in there is croissants.
"Moving backwards is when I can't be an obstacle to those trying to get to work."
I don't think it's slow boards, I think it's the whole site. I checked /x/, /fit/, /o/, and /pol/, all closed.By the way, 4chan's "April Fools" is closing slow boards with "Department of 4chan Efficiency", /n/ was one of the ones hit.
Also I love that it's proven the mass adoption of motorized personnel transportation strongly correlates to a drop in poverty because you can go much farther out for a job. If owning a car makes you poor then why is it countries with poor car owner but to poverty really do all they can to even get the truest shit box?
I don't think it's slow boards, I think it's the whole site. I checked /x/, /fit/, /o/, and /pol/, all closed.
Yeah, people who can't see WHY some things, like Mr Goodbars, are not desired by the public..... and is just flabbergast that even when provided by the money of another? Are left untouched because "Its just as good!" leaving out the fact that a lot of people don't like (and in some cases, medically can't eat) peanuts.
A 1980's non-full size pickup... That's a Chevy S10 and its not a fair comparison to a modern F-250crew cab, itself not the base model of full size Ford trucks.
That'd be £2,000 a month in London.I believe in Europe, non-college "dormitories" actually exist. If I had to share a shower and toilet amongst strangers I would hope I'm incarcerated, at least there they don't expect you to pay rent.
A lot of places do have rules/laws against cyclists riding on the sidewalk. In my state you have to be 15 or under to bike on the sidewalk. Once you're 16, you have to ride in the road as far to the right as is safe to do so, but are allowed to swerve if there is a hazard (like broken glass, branches, potholes, etc.)@quaawaa
They're cyclists. They can go on the sidewalk, or the sides of the roads.
A little bit of civil disobedience can go a long way toward common-sense safety.A lot of places do have rules/laws against cyclists riding on the sidewalk. In my state you have to be 15 or under to bike on the sidewalk. Once you're 16, you have to ride in the road as far to the right as is safe to do so, but are allowed to swerve if there is a hazard (like broken glass, branches, potholes, etc.)
I don't ever hear complaints about legislating cyclists out of existence, it's always carbrains this, infrastructure that.A lot of places do have rules/laws against cyclists riding on the sidewalk. In my state you have to be 15 or under to bike on the sidewalk. Once you're 16, you have to ride in the road as far to the right as is safe to do so, but are allowed to swerve if there is a hazard (like broken glass, branches, potholes, etc.)
to be fair this is a thread for "r/fuckcars," any reddit community is going to be the most retarded of any group. I do wish they'd legalize Idaho stops/rolling stops though, it's better for maintaining conservation of energy on a bike. Plus, if they get hit, fewer cyclists to post on /r/fuckcars. win-win.I don't ever hear complaints about legislating cyclists out of existence, it's always carbrains this, infrastructure that.