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#417220 - 06/26/08 09:17 AM
A new experience while driving my tow vehicle
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Admiral
Registered: 07/27/04
Posts: 986
Loc: Athens, GA
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So, this is a new one for me. On the way to work last week in my F150 Supercrew tow vehicle/daily driver, I passed a campus bus stop. Two or three people there waiting on the bus. As I drive by, I get a "thumbs down". Hmmm, but didn't really think much else about it.
Monday of this week, pass the same bus stop on my way in and I get another thumbs down. So, after I park, I give the truck a once over thinking maybe something is wrong. Don't see anything out of the ordinary. I can't recall for certain if it was the same girl and guy that gave me the first thumbs down, but I don't think so.
Fast forward to this morning. Driving by the bus stop and not only do I get the thumbs down, but also a "boooo" and "gas hog" yelled at me. These folks were definitely not the same as before. The ring leader this time was a mid-20s girl. She just about ran out in the road to make sure I saw her.
So, should I have picked her up and taken her to her destination on campus? If I did pick her up, should I have let her ride in the cab? Would the bed have been more appropriate for her? Or, should I have just swerved and run her over and put her out of her misery?
_________________________
05 FW 200 Horizon 03 F150 Supercrew FX4 2 dogs with own PFDs 7 cats who aren't impressed
Always remember Rule #6.
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#417238 - 06/26/08 09:36 AM
Re: A new experience while driving my tow vehicle
[Re: HotByte]
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Admiral
Registered: 10/02/06
Posts: 2071
Loc: Oldsmar FL
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I had a lady in a Prius sitting beside me at a traffic light motion for me to roll my window down, she was on the passenger side of me so it was hard for me to even see her. Anyway, she proceeds to tell me how I should be ashamed of myself for driving a vehicle that was destroying her world. I chuckled and started to roll the window up as she was spewing some other crap, then I decided to respond.
My first thought was to respond with a 9mm blast accross her bow with a kind shut up and mind your own business to follow, but I thought better of that. I rolled the window back down and proceeded to tell her that the day her Prius could tow my boat, haul all the stuff that I have in the bed of the truck, tow my other gas guzzling hobbies and their parts and pieces, and keep my family safe when some other big gas guzzler tries to run them over that I would certainly consider buying one. Then I said not really and rolled up the window (I'm not quoting myself, that is as close as I can get from memory). I would have kept going with some comments on how ugly the car was, and maybe even some personal attacks on her beauty (or lack thereoff), but the light turned green, and which time I floored the gas guzzler for good measure.
_________________________
Take care, Chris 06 Monterey 248 LS
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#417337 - 06/26/08 02:34 PM
Re: A new experience while driving my tow vehicle
[Re: CJS]
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Admiral
Registered: 01/19/03
Posts: 2212
Loc: Indianapolis
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The article about oil was on Kevin Kelly's site - which is fantastic. http://www.kk.org/ct2/Crude oil is almost $140 per barrel.
By now you'd think we would know where it comes from.
No one really knows. The conventional wisdom is that oil descends from algae from eons ago. Lots and lots of algae. Unimaginable mounds of dead algae in quantities no longer found on this planet, pressed, and cooked into hydrocarbon liquids. Thus: fossil fuel. Others, notably the Russians, have an alternative theory that oil comes from non-biological carbon compounds deep in this planet, like the methane oceans we find on other planets. In this scenario oil is a planetary phenomenon. Indeed this abiogenic oil could still be forming in the earth. Thousands of Russian papers supporting this view have still not been translated. The American astrophysicist Thomas Gold also advocated a similar idea (which may or may not have been influenced by the Russians) in his book "The Deep Hot Biosphere : The Myth of Fossil Fuels".
The best overview for this alternative genesis is this recent scientific paper by G.P. Glasby reviewing the Russian/Gold view in light of research as of 2005. It assumes too much knowledge, and is not the ideal introduction, but it does capture the evidence to date. Ultimately the paper is not sympathetic to the theory. It is available as a PDF here. Excerpt:
The success of the abiogenic theory can be seen by the fact that more than 80 oil and gas fields in the Caspian district have been explored and developed in crystalline basement rock on the basis of this theory. An emerging third theory is that bacteria living within rocks produce oil. In this theory there is a biological component (the bacteria) which constitute the oil-generating process, but the originating material in not degraded organic material, but rather geological carbon gases. The path is carbon gas --> bug --> oil. Craig Venter and others are exploring the idea of engineering bacteria to make oil from other carbon gases, like CO2. Different bacteria could also be involved in reforming organic material into oil; there may be a multitude of ways oil forms.
In any case I am betting on bacteria as the creators of oil simply because I've learned to never bet against bacteria.
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