Middle of nowhere UT on a dirt road a family of at least ten were pulled over and the parents were changing a tire. I stopped and asked if they were all good. Blank stares all around. Weird.
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Prolly twenty% on my local walk/ride. I just figured that’s the way that amount of the population is, no big deal.
I think the fact that the rental companies move cars around the entire US so much makes it tough to dictate the tire requirements. It is also one of the reasons there are so many TX and FL plates in CO all the time and they all drive like morons because they are either tourist or worse yet, actual Texans.
Not to mention the car rental market must have some pretty strong lobbying power.
https://ridemonkey.bikemag.com/image...es/xmooooh.gif
This is probably the *core* reason.Quote:
Not to mention the car rental market must have some pretty strong lobbying power.
This is true, although I'm a little surprised some places don't retain "local" cars that are kept out of the national pool. Like, a car that you can rent at DIA that has to be returned to the same place, and is set up for winter driving.
Or maybe they do have that and I just don't rent enough cars to know about it.
Well, if you guys do threads, you’ll get posts from women saying that it’s basically all creepy, stalking men on every hike they go on.
I installed the "Bouncer" ios app a few months ago and it has been pretty good.
Just added a bunch of keywords to the junk list like "trump" "biden" "actblue" "winred" etc. Only applies them to unknown senders so its not like I will miss texts from friends that happen to contain those words.
I must be on some list because I get a LOT of donation requests from candidates in random states I've never even been to...so I have to occasionally add new terms to the filter list, but otherwise it works pretty well.
It has filtered 204 texts since October 31st...
The Utah thing is interesting to me because my perception is that LDS almost go out of their way to be pleasant and nice--at least outwardly.
Here’s an example, when trying to rent boots to an LDS family, maybe you ask one of the kids “what’s your shoe size?” Or “What’s your date of birth?” Or even “what’s your name?” And they freeze, blankly staring, as if this might be another language, or possibly a trick question that will land them in hell.
Not everyone, but frequent enough that’s it’s real.
We called those types ‘scoops’.
As in, god took a big scoop out of their brain before birth.
It's not an issue in Sacramento--since the pandemic people cross the street to avoid sharing a sidewalk for a second or two, so saying hi is not an option. I guess no one got the memo.
As a creepy old man I make it a point to not look at women when I do pass them on the sidewalk. I've passed my across the street neighbor a couple of times not realizing it's her until she says hi. She probably thinks I'm an asshole. There may be other reasons as well.
What is the critical mass of crowding where no one says hi? Somewhere less crowded than Manhattan I would think. On the Tour du Mont Blanc literally everyone says bon jour (even in Italy) and it's a pretty busy trail. Then there was the guy I hiked with in the Sierra who stopped and had a conversation with everyone we passed. Stood in the middle of the trail so they had no choice. Another busy trail so we're talking a dozen or more times a day. I never hiked with him again, although that may have been more to do with me arguing vociferously about which way was the right way and being wrong more than once.
Got an ear infection that took months to clear up. I have permanent hearing loss from it
They tried to get it back with a shit load of steroids but zero change
Fuck off
man, that really sucks dude.
I've walked the kids to school almost every day for the last 6 years. I find it's more of a generational thing than an LDS thing around me. The millenials won't even make eye contact, anyone Gen X or older remembers what it was to look someone in the eye when you greet them.
Just got back from the local market. Just because of this thread I said hi to a guy who was willing to share the sidewalk with a stranger. No response. Think I'll go back to being unsociable, which suits me better.