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Only if you like it. Otherwise, the size of your peep must be determined based on some other ridiculous stereotype...
notoriousDUG said:So this means because I have to drive a van for work I have a small peep?
Jeff Schneider said:Yes.
Michael Perz said:Ah, there it is. I somehow must have missed it the first time.
Why does nearly everyone that decries ownership of larger vehicles invariably link the tendency to size variations in male genitalia? The claim is always that larger vehicle choices are indicative of compensation for smaller, allegedly insufficient genitals. Should I read this to mean that large male genitals are a superior trait to possess? Is it ultimately desirable to inflict physical pain on your intimate partner with superhuman length and girth and hence achieve dominant male status? Riddle me this, progressives.
Clark said:Can you really imagine a Prius driver driving as fast and aggressively as most SUV's? Two different personalities and penis sizes.
Acusing others of compensating is some people's way of.........compensating.
Hahahaha, stay away from my family's Prius. My parent's flip their butts out the window, and it's got a NRA sticker on the back window. I drive it like it's stolen, and make it a game to see how *LITTLE* I can run the electric (ie: beat the shit out of it) I'm the only one in the family with a clean record for the past year, and *le gasp* I drive a Grand Cherokee. Clark, I *really* feel sorry for you. So 'accepting' and a 'new age thinker'. *snort*
I got buzzed by a dually the other day. I was a little peeved, but he didn't see me, had no where to move over to, and had a full haywagon behind him (couldn't stop). He flipped his hazards as an apology. I better watch out for those red neck, hill jack, country jerks, eh? Or maybe I could realize I wasn't in an idea spot, and he was helpless.
But I'll just go ahead and make a generalization... I don't like duallys anyways.
Whatever, dood.
PS: my penis is HUGE. =P
Sorry but I can only view statements like that as ignorant. I understand that stereotypes often exist for a reason but that still does not mean we should perpetuate them or judge others based on that sort of thing.
I find that most people, in my experience, who ride bikes to be left leaning but I would never think to make the statements that bike riders are liberals or that they get that way after getting behind the bars of a bike. I continually hear people bemoan how they get judged as a cyclist by the generalizations people make about cyclists because of the bad behavior of a certain percentage of a certain type of cyclist; is it not exactly the same thing with you judging motorists based on the same thing?
I give SUVs a wide berth because I have had a fair amount of issue with them; they have large blind spots and are often driven by people not good at handling that large a vehicle. However, I do not make judgments about the people driving them beyond my feelings that they are making a inefficient choice. There is a very big difference between avoiding a common hazard passing judgment.
Anne Alt said:Dug - Maybe it sounds like generalizing to you, but Clark's comment has matched up pretty well with my experience. There are certain types of cars I try to stay clear of due to past experience with typical behavior by drivers of those cars. Big SUVs, Mustangs and BMWs are high on my list of cars to avoid, right up there with cabs.
notoriousDUG said:Christ, did you really sit down, type that out and not realize what a hateful and generalizing jerk you sound like?
Statements like that remove your right to ever be upset when people make generalizations about you because you ride a bike or do not own a car.
'Clark, fighting injustice with ignorance since 1979' Clark said:Tank-Ridin' Ryan said:...As for the SUV remark, a f'ing Prius could run you over just as well - and be 'green' while doing it!....
Yeah, true. But I'm with those that believe SUV drivers are more hostile than drivers of smaller cars...as soon as they get behind the wheel. Just my observation, from biking around Chicago for many years. And Prius drivers are just the opposite.
Can you really imagine a Prius driver driving as fast and aggressively as most SUV's? Two different personalities and penis sizes.
So we can't vent about aggressive and dangerous drivers here? Because you drive a truck for work?
Sorry, I bite my tongue all day long, I find it pretty piggish of you to want to deprive me one of few options for having a place to connect with like-minded people who share the same frustrations and are similarly victimized on a day-in, day-out basis for their transportation choice.
Every discussion does not have to be about you and the truck you have to drive for work.
And, FYI, when you open a communication by declaring ignorance on the part of your audience, most people don't read any further (but maybe that's your intent.)
notoriousDUG said:Sorry but I can only view statements like that as ignorant. I understand that stereotypes often exist for a reason but that still does not mean we should perpetuate them or judge others based on that sort of thing.
I find that most people, in my experience, who ride bikes to be left leaning but I would never think to make the statements that bike riders are liberals or that they get that way after getting behind the bars of a bike. I continually hear people bemoan how they get judged as a cyclist by the generalizations people make about cyclists because of the bad behavior of a certain percentage of a certain type of cyclist; is it not exactly the same thing with you judging motorists based on the same thing? I give SUVs a wide berth because I have had a fair amount of issue with them; they have large blind spots and are often driven by people not good at handling that large a vehicle. However, I do not make judgments about the people driving them beyond my feelings that they are making a inefficient choice. There is a very big difference between avoiding a common hazard passing judgment.
Anne Alt said:Dug - Maybe it sounds like generalizing to you, but Clark's comment has matched up pretty well with my experience. There are certain types of cars I try to stay clear of due to past experience with typical behavior by drivers of those cars. Big SUVs, Mustangs and BMWs are high on my list of cars to avoid, right up there with cabs.
notoriousDUG said:Christ, did you really sit down, type that out and not realize what a hateful and generalizing jerk you sound like?
Statements like that remove your right to ever be upset when people make generalizations about you because you ride a bike or do not own a car.
'Clark, fighting injustice with ignorance since 1979' Clark said:Tank-Ridin' Ryan said:...As for the SUV remark, a f'ing Prius could run you over just as well - and be 'green' while doing it!....
Yeah, true. But I'm with those that believe SUV drivers are more hostile than drivers of smaller cars...as soon as they get behind the wheel. Just my observation, from biking around Chicago for many years. And Prius drivers are just the opposite.
Can you really imagine a Prius driver driving as fast and aggressively as most SUV's? Two different personalities and penis sizes.
The space suit and carbon %100 everything lays the foundation for me to yell out "Lance Armstrong" when people blast by me in traffic.
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