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Old 06-25-2013, 07:50 AM   #15
johnsimion
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Missouri
Posts: 112
Quote:
Originally Posted by BrokenLinkage View Post
I'd prob buckle under and put the plate on if my state required it, but heck, if I didn't care about the beautiful lines of my car, there are a lot of other more practical car options out there, and...
You gotta draw the line somewhere at unnecessary government intrusion.
By the time we get old, we are tired of drawing the line anywhere, and just jump through the hoops. We justify mental/moral/physical laziness as practicality (you can't fight every minor battle, can you?)
Soon, it becomes the norm, and tomorrows youth act like yesterdays aged and tired, and the price of freedom inches up.
We should enjoy our cars before the state recognizes us for the selfish criminals we are, abusing the resources of our country for the sake of something as antisocial and unproductive as plain old fun.

Congrats Flavor on your win, and for taking up the case for all of us more lazy types. It sounds like the both the judge and the policewoman see your point, and that is at least a tiny start in the process of getting the law changed to eradicate this tiny bit of extraneous bureaucracy.
But before I'm too old to drive, I expect there will be an exorbitant tax for those of us that don't agree to install self-monitoring GPS with reporting capability to monitor our location/speed/traffic compliance. Or maybe it will be a flat-out requirement. After all, we have been told over and over that driving is a privilege, not a right, and that the freedom envisioned by the founding fathers did not include automotive travel.
Meh. You're worried about government intrusion by having to have two plates, and I'm more worried about the 90% of Americans who are out there texting while driving, talking on cell phones, eating, putting on makeup, driving 50 mph in the fast lane, etc. My friend in LA has been rearended twice in the last month by morons on cell phones. If everyone drove like you and I and the rest of the 986 forum readers who actually care about driving and pay attention, we wouldn't need all those government regulations. It's because of the other 90% that we do, and I'm darned glad we do. Personally I wish we had MORE enforcement (of stuff that counts, not just setting speed traps for revenue). In perspective, complaining about having to have two plates strikes me as just plain petty. And yes, I have two plates on my Cayman. Boo hoo.
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