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faterikcartman
Participant[quote=lindismith]Any public transport that helps San Diegans is good IMO.[/quote]
LOL — that’s how they sucker people to vote for these bond issues. They help a very very small number of people but many pay for it. They are the pride and joy of hippies who don’t care that not enough people ride them to make them economical. They just know they don’t want you to have the freedom to drive your car on your own schedule and live out in the suburbs in urban sprawlsville. These projects generally make the people pushing them feel good about themselves like they are saving the earth. Eventually they’ll get around to figuring out how to force you to use them, live like sardines in dense urban areas, and restrict your freedom to use your automobile. Just be patient.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=lindismith]Any public transport that helps San Diegans is good IMO.[/quote]
LOL — that’s how they sucker people to vote for these bond issues. They help a very very small number of people but many pay for it. They are the pride and joy of hippies who don’t care that not enough people ride them to make them economical. They just know they don’t want you to have the freedom to drive your car on your own schedule and live out in the suburbs in urban sprawlsville. These projects generally make the people pushing them feel good about themselves like they are saving the earth. Eventually they’ll get around to figuring out how to force you to use them, live like sardines in dense urban areas, and restrict your freedom to use your automobile. Just be patient.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=lindismith]Any public transport that helps San Diegans is good IMO.[/quote]
LOL — that’s how they sucker people to vote for these bond issues. They help a very very small number of people but many pay for it. They are the pride and joy of hippies who don’t care that not enough people ride them to make them economical. They just know they don’t want you to have the freedom to drive your car on your own schedule and live out in the suburbs in urban sprawlsville. These projects generally make the people pushing them feel good about themselves like they are saving the earth. Eventually they’ll get around to figuring out how to force you to use them, live like sardines in dense urban areas, and restrict your freedom to use your automobile. Just be patient.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=lindismith]Any public transport that helps San Diegans is good IMO.[/quote]
LOL — that’s how they sucker people to vote for these bond issues. They help a very very small number of people but many pay for it. They are the pride and joy of hippies who don’t care that not enough people ride them to make them economical. They just know they don’t want you to have the freedom to drive your car on your own schedule and live out in the suburbs in urban sprawlsville. These projects generally make the people pushing them feel good about themselves like they are saving the earth. Eventually they’ll get around to figuring out how to force you to use them, live like sardines in dense urban areas, and restrict your freedom to use your automobile. Just be patient.
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnd with that my wife tells me I’m not allowed to post in this thread anymore. π
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnd with that my wife tells me I’m not allowed to post in this thread anymore. π
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnd with that my wife tells me I’m not allowed to post in this thread anymore. π
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnd with that my wife tells me I’m not allowed to post in this thread anymore. π
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnd with that my wife tells me I’m not allowed to post in this thread anymore. π
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=captcha]I was responding to this.
[quote=CONCHO]
I think firearms should be illegal here just like in Mexico. Then we will be able to enjoy the same high levels of safety that the Mexican people have.
[/quote]Read more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_politics_in_Mexico%5B/quote%5DDid you read the article I linked to? Concho is essentially correct. The common person cannot, and does not, legally own guns in Mexico. Yet Mexico is wildly lawless and dangerous in places and major shootouts in the center of town are commonplace.
An exaggerated example that highlights the issue is to take as a given that aspirin costs $1,000,000.00 per pill, and can only be purchased on a military base in Colorado Springs, and only with the permission of your corrupt local officials, and then claiming aspirin is freely available to any US citizen.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=captcha]I was responding to this.
[quote=CONCHO]
I think firearms should be illegal here just like in Mexico. Then we will be able to enjoy the same high levels of safety that the Mexican people have.
[/quote]Read more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_politics_in_Mexico%5B/quote%5DDid you read the article I linked to? Concho is essentially correct. The common person cannot, and does not, legally own guns in Mexico. Yet Mexico is wildly lawless and dangerous in places and major shootouts in the center of town are commonplace.
An exaggerated example that highlights the issue is to take as a given that aspirin costs $1,000,000.00 per pill, and can only be purchased on a military base in Colorado Springs, and only with the permission of your corrupt local officials, and then claiming aspirin is freely available to any US citizen.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=captcha]I was responding to this.
[quote=CONCHO]
I think firearms should be illegal here just like in Mexico. Then we will be able to enjoy the same high levels of safety that the Mexican people have.
[/quote]Read more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_politics_in_Mexico%5B/quote%5DDid you read the article I linked to? Concho is essentially correct. The common person cannot, and does not, legally own guns in Mexico. Yet Mexico is wildly lawless and dangerous in places and major shootouts in the center of town are commonplace.
An exaggerated example that highlights the issue is to take as a given that aspirin costs $1,000,000.00 per pill, and can only be purchased on a military base in Colorado Springs, and only with the permission of your corrupt local officials, and then claiming aspirin is freely available to any US citizen.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=captcha]I was responding to this.
[quote=CONCHO]
I think firearms should be illegal here just like in Mexico. Then we will be able to enjoy the same high levels of safety that the Mexican people have.
[/quote]Read more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_politics_in_Mexico%5B/quote%5DDid you read the article I linked to? Concho is essentially correct. The common person cannot, and does not, legally own guns in Mexico. Yet Mexico is wildly lawless and dangerous in places and major shootouts in the center of town are commonplace.
An exaggerated example that highlights the issue is to take as a given that aspirin costs $1,000,000.00 per pill, and can only be purchased on a military base in Colorado Springs, and only with the permission of your corrupt local officials, and then claiming aspirin is freely available to any US citizen.
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=captcha]I was responding to this.
[quote=CONCHO]
I think firearms should be illegal here just like in Mexico. Then we will be able to enjoy the same high levels of safety that the Mexican people have.
[/quote]Read more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_politics_in_Mexico%5B/quote%5DDid you read the article I linked to? Concho is essentially correct. The common person cannot, and does not, legally own guns in Mexico. Yet Mexico is wildly lawless and dangerous in places and major shootouts in the center of town are commonplace.
An exaggerated example that highlights the issue is to take as a given that aspirin costs $1,000,000.00 per pill, and can only be purchased on a military base in Colorado Springs, and only with the permission of your corrupt local officials, and then claiming aspirin is freely available to any US citizen.
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