

So are you an anarchist? That’s the only way this logic would make sense to me.


I mean… isn’t that how it works in cities? Like proper cities, not American suburbs? I’m in a pretty big city right now and I don’t think I ever went above 30 mph until I entered the motorway


The only ones? You don’t truly and fully support speed limits, lane driving, obeying traffic signals, using indicators?


Agree with this as well. Always weird when the speed limit decreases and the road stays the same.


Stuff urine motherforker c*** fort tights turf twad come sm*gma pussycat chicken chicken pdfile bill Clinton George bush Donald Trump Barack Obama Israel Netanyahu fork ogre grape unalive purple monkey dishwasher forkstick dipshirt punching great analogy felching ogre. you mean?
Donate your kid today


It’s just the truth, water washes away lubrication. I would be interested to know how thats different for uncircumcised individuals though.


No, why would it be? Water is the anti-lubricant


You get a nuke, and you get a nuke, and you get a nuke, everybody gets a nuke!

Silicone has some bend to it. Wood doesn’t. With silicone I can easily scrape the sides of mixing bowls and such.


I do have a favorite series of spatulas. I won’t mention the company cause I don’t want to advertise but they are excellent silicone spatulas. I have 3 of them, each different shapes and sizes (and colors :3). Ah it so excellent
should’ve had following distance.
How is it supposed to be efficient to use an entire lane only for exiting?
Not really though, all lanes except the rightmost lane should be passing lanes. It is different in urban areas where they often open up 2 or 3 lanes for exit only or if there is constant heavy merging. But in general, keep right unless passing
Edit: heck I bet most consumer grade routers DHCP servers would choke after the first 255 clients (probably much sooner) just from having to change subnets. I’m not a networkologist though so IDK for sure
As somewhat of a networkologist I can say that most home routers use the 192.168.something.x IP range. With a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0, this means that you could put 253 devices on the network (2 of the IPs aren’t usable for devices). After that, you would have to change your subnet mask to something larger, which is easily doable in router config. However, a home router likely wouldn’t work well with even just 100 devices connected. WiFi is also half duplex, meaning it can only send or receive, but not both at the same time. This would make the speed unbearably slow. You would really need multiple access points to have this many devices.


Counterpoint to 2: I’m just paranoid
Kansas, like most all of the USA is very car dependent so losing a drivers license could result in not being able to commute to a job