People need to learn to leave other people’s cars alone... if I’m driving and a passenger makes any move of changing anything except their own seat heater or something: “don’t you dare!”
"sit down, shut up, hang on"People need to learn to leave other people’s cars alone... if I’m driving and a passenger makes any move of changing anything except their own seat heater or something: “don’t you dare!”
The first time I drove my then-manager's 2008 or something Avensis (incredibly dull car) I couldn't get my head around the instrument cluster that was so far back in the dash it always had to be illuminated to see it. Up to this point we had been fine with white lettering, I don't know why they chose to make it that way.
I definitely think there should be tail lights with DRLs at all times, even if they are only small LED equivalents of the DRLs. Are US marker lights on at all times? Were they in the bad old days where they had to ruin every nice car design to graft them on?
I remember in the mid-1990s reading that DRLs would likely be mandated soon, so GM was ahead of the curve and started adding them. The mandate never came, but GM still lots them in quite a few of their vehicles.The first time I drove my then-manager's 2008 or something Avensis (incredibly dull car) I couldn't get my head around the instrument cluster that was so far back in the dash it always had to be illuminated to see it. Up to this point we had been fine with white lettering, I don't know why they chose to make it that way.
I definitely think there should be tail lights with DRLs at all times, even if they are only small LED equivalents of the DRLs. Are US marker lights on at all times? Were they in the bad old days where they had to ruin every nice car design to graft them on?
Not to my knowledge, no. DRL’s as far as I know we’re first required in Canada in the early 90s at least. But that was a different time because gauges weren’t always illuminated.
Also, the poverty, neglect and indifference I see in America keep shocking me.
I used to help out in homeless shelters quite a bit in my teenage years. Back then and today it just feels so exhausting and overwhelming to correct. Because no matter what you do it’s never enough and it feels like nothing changes even if you are helping 10, 15 maybe 20 people at a time. There’s still so many that aren’t getting help and it feels like you’ve done nothing. It l feels like it’s being fought against. Not the usual “the rich are getting richer they’re hurting the low income guy “but in the sense that even if you help people does the amount that are becoming homeless or having some sort of mental issue that’s preventing them from them getting better on their own and with services to help people. You feel very alone helping these people despite there being quite the groups that are working with you.As a US citizen, it is still shocking, but most seem to ignore it.
I'll allow "crack candy" as long as the candy itself is cracked, like peanut brittle, peppermint bark, etc.
"methamphetamine fluffernutter balls"