Van wrote:you're proving to be useless this go around.
Almost as useless as an armchair lawyer making up definitoins of crimes he just pulled out of his ignorant ass.
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
...so in response to you now I'm asking for clarification.I believe I referred to it as "attempted vehicular manslaughter", which is what I'm calling it when somebody literally attempts to smash you with their car.
If that's incorrect, okay. Fuck 'em anyway.
Oh dear LORD this is priceless.Dinsdale wrote:And if I saw a guy with a cali plate doing it, you can bet your fucking ass I'd cut him off.
So which is it? "Tough guy" or "carefree utopian"?Dinsdale wrote:The thing that pisses me off the most is that when I'm on the road, I'm always surrounded by people who have such sad, pathetic, empty lives that they actually get worked up by what other people are doing on the road. It's hard to believe that these people are driving on an American road for the very first time, but that's obviously the case, since anyone who had actually driven more than 5 miles in the city before is going to realize that those little annoyances are happening every minute of every day in every city in America. Reacting with anger or annoyance at other people's bad/rude habits is so incredibly dumb -- you KNEW what was going to happen as soon as you fired up the car, yet you CHOSE to do it anyway.
Something to ponder -- YOU knew what was going to happen as far as the behaviors and delays, and YOU'RE getting your blood pressure up over it....so, that in mind, and regardless who you're yelling at out the window --- WHO'S the "idiot" again?
MgoBlue-LightSpecial wrote:[
So which is it? "Tough guy" or "carefree utopian"?
That's the logical way of looking at it, but when you're actually the one forced to "do the time", you kinda feel like everyone else in your situation should too. I don't think plucking all those bikes out of a traffic jam is going to free up that much time or room anyway. Hell, take all the bikes out and I might get home one minute faster. I'd rather the "riders" (I dunno, what's the supercool term for you guys?) wait an equivalent amount of time, because letting them through isn't worth the dissatisfaction of knowing they'll get to their beers 30 minutes faster than I will. Not fair, man. Not fair.Car drivers ought to welcome the sight of a lane splitter. That's one less guy clogging the freeways and city streets in the never ending congo line.
Jealousy just isn't the right word. Jealousy stems from something you want or desire. I don't desire to be in your situation, for I'm not asking things to pickup faster (though it would be nice). I'm merely requesting that everyody obey the laws of the road. I just fail to see how that's asking so much of you.Van wrote:Yes, you are jealous. Not of bikes, but of those people not stuck in traffic while you continue to be stuck in traffic.
Bikes just happen to be the medium that fuels your jealousy whenever you're stuck there in traffic seething like a little bitch, watching others moving along...
What's worse is when these impatient pussies try to rationalize it by claiming they're attempting to perform ME a service. They're not even secure enough in their own actions to say, without shame, that they're "threading" only to satisfy themselves.That's what you're jealous about and that's why idiots like you try to rationalize it by resorting to terms such as "politeness" and "consideration", like it's some sort of imposition to you when others choose not to be stuck in line with you.
You could've done well with this angle, had you realized how to correctly attack it. In fact, I was worried the second you went here, that you had disposed the slight flaw in my reasoning.Btw, what part of "I'm far too practical of a person" is embodied in being stuck in traffic, idling in a gas guzzler, knowing full there are cheaper and more time efficient ways of traveling...
Sounds willfully stupid, not "practical". "Practical" would involve spending less money on a ride that also eliminates wasted time stuck in traffic like a fucking lemming...
Yes, and when you're stuck idling in stop and go traffic what you want and desire more than anything is to be moving, which is what people on bikes are doing.Jealousy just isn't the right word. Jealousy stems from something you want or desire.
Y2K wrote:DAMN that CosaminDS is facking expensive.
I hold the GoobTube's advice in the highest regard so I'm sure it was well worth the money.
This stuff better not have any "oh BTW" side effects like impotence dammit!
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Thnx
Joe in PB wrote: Yeah I'm the dumbass
schmick, speaking about Larry Nassar's pubescent and prepubescent victims wrote: They couldn't even kick that doctors ass
Seems they rather just lay there, get fucked and play victim
Van wrote:how then could you ever work up any sort of lather over somebody lane splitting?
All of which gives you no right whatsoever to flout the law. Stay in line and wait your fucking turn. Or wind up as road splatter. Your choice.Van wrote:Also, I notice you didn't even bother to correct my perfectly valid point about your lack of practicality. You made reference to some supposed better tact I might've taken but the fact remains that you're spending more on gas and in time then you would commuting on a bike. There's no getting around the fact that the latter is more practical than the former and no, it doesn't take an "extremist" just to commute on a motorcycle.
Joe in PB wrote: Yeah I'm the dumbass
schmick, speaking about Larry Nassar's pubescent and prepubescent victims wrote: They couldn't even kick that doctors ass
Seems they rather just lay there, get fucked and play victim
As the former lead authority in grammar, spelling, and punctuation "smack", I am quite disappointed you chose the current mangled version of the old phrase, "one and the same".MgoBlue-LightSpecial wrote:I wonder when you die if you get the choice of heaven or the U&L? Or are they one in the same?
UcantPwns wrote:As the former lead authority in grammar, spelling, and punctuation "smack", I am quite disappointed you chose the current mangled version of the old phrase, "one and the same".
Actually, dins is right.UcantPwns wrote:Since the end of the typeset era. Oh... I'm sorry. You backwards fucks are usually a little behind in the times. Has that happened in the U&L yet?Dinsdale wrote:Since when did commas and periods go on the outside of the quotation marks?
Next question.
UcantPwns wrote:Since the end of the typeset era. Oh... I'm sorry. You backwards fucks are usually a little behind in the times. Has that happened in the U&L yet?
Next question.
Mike the Lab Rat wrote:commas and periods always, always, ALWAYS go inside the quotation marks.
Sig bets aren't my style....too "schoolyard" for my tastes. Never done 'em, never will.UcantPwns wrote:Mike the Lab Rat wrote:When I typed up my thesis a four years ago on a computer, APA style dictated that commas and periods always, always, ALWAYS go inside the quotation marks.
Sig Bet?
That's not what we're talking about and you know it.UcantPwns wrote:http://leo.stcloudstate.edu/research/pu ... mma/Period
The period goes outside of the quotation mark when using a parenthetical reference.
"Animals have a variety of emotions similar to human's" (Erikson 990).
UcantPwns wrote: The period goes outside of the quotation mark when using a parenthetical reference.