by Pops » Sat 17 May 2014, 07:38:45
That's pretty funny. Gotta remember tho, 50 or 60 million cars are built each year so there is bound to be a million or 2 or 10 somewhere between the factory and a driveway at any one time.
I'm of the age cohort that grew up in cars, probably conceived there, they were a big deal. TV shows like, My Mother The Car, 77 Sunset Strip, The Rat Patrol, and movies ... I grew up in the same town as George Lucas (who made the movie American Graffiti), maybe 10 years his junior but ate at the Mels drive-in on 9th st, and of course cruised every weekend. Cars were the thing.
My dream as a kids was to get a job, then get a pickup, and go. That's just what I did. Didn't necessarily need a car to do that but it was part of the dream. I bummed around here and there doing construction or Manpower (temporary work agency) and seeing the US. Some folks hiked Europe but I didn't really have the inclination, it was about the drive.
We have arranged our lives so we don't need a daily vehicle for our day to day. I work from home and we try to stack up errands to the little burg 5mi away to minimize trips to a couple of times a month and to the bigger burgs 20-40 mi. away to a couple trips a year. I haven't started the pickup in almost 3 weeks, actually it will be 3 weeks tomorrow.
Still, I feel vaguely uneasy ... no, actually I feel stranded and rather anxious without a working vehicle, whether I need to go anywhere or not.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)