"l not -l" wrote in message ...
On 17-Jul-2018, "Ophelia" > wrote:
> "l not -l" wrote in message ...
>
>
> On 16-Jul-2018, wrote:
>
> > Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> > >dsi1 wrote:
> > >>Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> > >> >
> > >> > As you wish. I'd never buy a stove that I had to clean manually.
> > >>
> > >> That's like not wanting a 63 Corvette because it doesn't come with
> > >> ABS.
> > >
> > >Your analogy is lost on me. For me, a car is a tool to move me
> > >and my stuff from Point A to Point B.
> > >
> > >In any event, ABS is really handy up here where it snows.
> > >
> > >Cindy Hamilton
> >
> > No normal person drives a Corvette (ABS or not) in snow, not even in
> > rain.
> I can't recall ever meeting a Corvette owner that seemed a normal person.
> Around here they are pretty much all owned by very over-weight females,
> self-absorbed "pretty boys" or old doctors or lawyers having late-life
> crises.
>
> ==
>
> I don't know it but that looks like a nice car. What do those who are not
> very over-weight females, self-absorbed "pretty boys" or old doctors or
> lawyers having late-life crises drive? <g>
Again, I speak of what I observe around here, the normal weight females
(youngish) drive Jeeps; Wranglers if single without children, Cherokees if
attached with 0-1 children, Chevy Suburbans if attached with 2 or more
school age children. Pretty boys sometimes drive Corvettes owned by
overweight females, the rest of the time they drive whatever brand/age
"muscle car" they can afford. Old doctors and lawyers drive BMWs, Audis and
sometimes restored cars they couldn't afford in their youth (Mustangs,
Challengers, Camaros, etc).
==
Isn't it odd how some people seem to stick to their own age stereotype
Pretty boys, eh? lol
Here people drive all kinds of cars and I couldn't really attribute one car
to one type of person