• Cars

    From George Pope@1:153/757 to Joe Mackey on Tue Jul 26 10:30:16 2022
    CP wrote --
    Nor could an establishment be called a "saloon". A local place here went
    to court about that in the late '80s and won.

    This was your childhood era/location?
    This was here in town.
    AFAIK there no places called a saloon otherwise in WV. And that place
    went of business years ago.

    I've only known of "saloon" as the American term for a bar/pub. There's a few across the border here.

    We used to pop in there on our monthly tobacco run in Sumas, have a couple pitchers before heading home. . .

    In my hometown (now officially a city) they had no Sunday shopping laws
    WV had blue laws until around the '50s or '60s.
    I had no skin in that one -- mattered nought to me. If the stores were
    closed any day, I got what I needed another day.
    Concur.
    At one time liquor and beer laws prohibited selling on Sunday. I always thought why not just buy it ahead of time? Or are you planning on drinking all those bottles and need more?

    Yup? No biggie, but a local millionaire(presumably not religious in the Christian/Sunday sense) wanted customers to be able to shop on both common weekend days off at his grocery stores, so he began quietly staying open. Prolly some old lady who didn't really care deeply(more on "principle"), made a phone call to the constabulary or her friend on the police force.

    Personally I don't care, but principly, I believe if we're to define ourselves as freedom to act/speak/worship as one wishes, then you can't have blue laws. If community standards were truly against it, then nobody'd shop no Sundays & eventually the guy would keep it closed. If staff wanted Sundays off for their own worship -- it's already established in law that they must be granted their religious freedom & the day off (not with pay, of course); the position has to be advertised as including Sundays & holidays, then one presumes those applying are fine with such.

    Then you get some guy who took a job that was to include scheduling on any days, per the boss' needs. & he later converted to some obscure religion that had certain days off, & sued, as the boss, when asked for those days to be blocked off, essentially said, "I hired you to fill any shifts without blocked off times," sadly, the courts ruled against the employer, & he had to pay back pay plus interest for those days worked against his newfound religion.

    I don't agree with this -- I'd expect two weeks notice of any changes, including quitting or starting a new religion with certain rights. Not that
    the courts would support me, even if the contract they signed said this.

    In the late '70s I drove a cab and liquor blue laws were still in effect. (Beer was allowed by then). After a short time I knew where all the bootleggers were in town from someone wanting booze either after the state stores*
    closed or a Sunday.
    I knew knew where the houses of ill-repute where.

    Typical for cabbies,. I understand, especially in smaller towns, or tourist destinations. My landlord/employer(PT Casual Dispatcher) back east when I was 17, owned the block, including the only local taxi company. He used to keep a hooker in the back room, until his wife forced him to stop, & they had the basic boozes people requested(beer, whiskey. vodka) stocked up in a different back room. Nobody ever asked for anything besides a ride when I was answering the phone(most days, as he had a line run to my pool hall), but, yeah, locals are going to talk to the driver directly, not to a stranger(non-local, to boot) on the phone. Most trips were shopping trips or drunks going home who lived too far from the hotel bar to walk in the -40 & 2' of snow.

    The main trip for this was 30 miles up out of town, & the cabbies typically required payment up-front, from the welfare drunks.

    I have no idea where they are today or if they even exist.

    Likely do, but with different staff providing the fitness classes to customers.

    I also knew many of the hookers, who for the most part were as ugly as a
    mud fence. I always thought their johns must been awfully hard up to go
    with one of them.

    I've seen my share of both ends of the quality continuum. Only as an outsider - - not my thing. . . I was offered a freebie from a Calgary pimp because he had a brother who lived in Vancouver & I was from there. I was a 16yo virgin, & wasn't about to have my first experience with a hooker, plus I was scared they'd beat me & rob me. . . (I've read a lot of stories with this as a scene)

    I do remember one beautiful woman, like a model, whom I discovered after
    a few rides was a call girl, at $100 an hour (over $385 today). She was a secretary by day. Looking at her one would have never suspected.

    I was approached by one, years ago,. a downtown street girl, who struck up a conversation because I'd, civilly wished a good evening.

    She asked if I had a girlfriend (no); then asked if I liked to party (occasionally, thinking she meant literally, involving music & drinking), then asked if I'd like to party with her; I said, "I'm pretty sure I can't afford you" (to let her know I was onto what was going on here, that I wasn't a country bumpkin) & she said, quick as a cobra, "$100, anything you want." so I said, "Yup, I was right; can't afford you - you have a good night, now. . ."

    (* Until the 1990s the state of WV sold liquor and could only legally
    buy from the state.)

    It was so here until only about ten years ago, when they legalized private stores, but with severe restrictions. Any sales/discounts given were to be matched by an equal surtax on the customer. Bars only two years ago, could have happy hour, but only about a 30% discount & had to be a minimum price for the discounted drinks, so the bars just increased their overall prices to provide the full 30% off. When drinking in the next province over at age 16, I was in a strip club that had happy hour that night, each drink ordered & paid for at the usual price resulted in two being delivered. I got 'faced pretty quickly.


    I wonder what look-alike SUV's and such today will someday be
    "classics"? Darn sight few I imagine.

    I doubt many could survive long -- a buddy had a '67 Mustang body he bought from a fire -- it was burned right out -- he restored it to mint factory condition (all original parts, he found, worldwide, one by one); today's cars, there'd be only the odd bolt surviving a big fire. I call them "styrofoam cars" (the ones made of composites or fiberglass)

    I picture a Ford Focus in a fire like a to-go coffee cup in a campfire.

    I an watching videos of classic cars (started with ones from the 1890ss
    and up to 1960 now)*. They either people and their cars today, commercials from the era, dealer sales film strips/films (usually how wonderful their
    car is compared to others of the l
    I love how cars were all the same size, it was mostly just a trim/engine difference. Along with things like standard or automatic, etc.

    Yup, you could go back, do comparative studies on gasoline mileage between brands and years, as I was trying to do -- I wanted to prove that we're being deliberately screwed on mileage. The companiers say "oh, modern cars have a lot more going on, so use more power(e./g. AC), so I was comparing like engines & car sizes/models in barebones factory models.

    I constantly sigh and shake my head when some young person is talking
    about a car then rags how it doesn't have this, that and the other that are in
    modern cars. ("This car has no seat belts!" "This car has no GPS" etc when talking about a 1950s or '60s
    One had a some kid in his 20s trying to figure out how to shift a
    standard column.

    *LOL* Sounds like a YouTube channel I like: "Kids react to..."

    (*At first it was whatever some YT channel host had. Then I started
    putting them in order, being a bit OCD, with bookmarks for 1950, 1951, etc. And I go from make and model starting with the lower priced to the top of the line, and by model.
    For example, take 1960.
    I will start with Ford, Chevy and Plymouth. Then up to Mercury, then Pontiac-Olds-Buick. Then Desoto, Dodge, etc. Up to Cadillac, Lincoln, Chrysler. Also Studebaker, AMC, etc.)

    A fun, inexpensive hobby, not requiring gas or money or even clean laundry!

    My hobbies are all like that now. . .

    Collecting/making memes, collecting/sharing jokes, influencing governments(all Cdn so far,. 3 levels to work with), plus working here & there in between (my choice of days & hours); I wrote the Indian PM to suggest how he could help Ukraine & gain global respect/business, if he wasn't too deeply married to Putin. . .

    --- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Toy-6
    * Origin: The Rusty MailBox - Penticton, BC Canada (1:153/757)
  • From august abolins@2:221/1.59 to George Pope on Fri Nov 11 03:36:20 2022

    Then you get some guy who took a job that was to include scheduling on any days, per the boss' needs. & he later converted to some obscure religion that had certain days off, & sued, as the boss, when asked for those days to be blocked off, essentially said, "I hired you to fill any shifts without blocked off times," sadly, the courts ruled against the employer, & he had to pay back pay plus interest for those days worked against his newfound religion.

    Where and when did that happen? I would think that there would be equal "laws" and tests in law that define WHEN someone's idea of religion is actually a valid religion.


    --- AfterShock/Android 1.6.11
    * Origin: Mobile Pix (2:221/1.59)
  • From George Pope@1:153/757 to August Abolins on Fri Nov 25 09:23:06 2022
    Then you get some guy who took a job that was to include scheduling on any >> days, per the boss' needs. & he later converted to some obscure religion
    that had certain days off, & sued, as the boss, when asked for those days >> to be blocked off, essentially said, "I hired you to fill any shifts
    without blocked off times," sadly, the courts ruled against the employer, >> & he had to pay back pay plus interest for those days worked against his
    newfound religion.
    Where and when did that happen? I would think that there would be equal "laws
    and tests in law that define WHEN someone's idea of religion is actually a valid religion.

    It was preposterous; it happened here in BC; abbotsford, I believe (right in the middle of the biggest Bible Belt of Canada--I grew up just across the river
    & hung around in Abbotsford's malls as a ne'er-do-well teen)

    --- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Toy-6
    * Origin: The Rusty MailBox - Penticton, BC Canada (1:153/757)
  • From August Abolins@1:153/757.21 to George Pope on Fri Nov 25 19:26:00 2022
    Where and when did that happen? I would think that there would be equal
    "laws and tests in law that define WHEN someone's idea of religion is
    actually a valid religion.

    It was preposterous; it happened here in BC; abbotsford, I believe (right in the middle of the biggest Bible Belt of Canada--I grew up just across the river & hung around in Abbotsford's malls as a ne'er-do-well teen)


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Lady_of_Perpetual_Exemption

    John Oliver created a fake church/religion.

    The YT segments about it are pretty funny.

    --
    ../|ug

    --- OpenXP 5.0.51
    * Origin: Creditors have better memories than debtors. (1:153/757.21)