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  • talisman
    Guest replied
    Did either one try to make the other flinch?

    Leave a comment:


  • mstng86
    replied
    Originally posted by 2165 Turbo Rail View Post
    Lunch did happen and everything was totally fine bet we didn't talk about it for two minutes total
    How was the stare down moment?

    Leave a comment:


  • 2165 Turbo Rail
    replied
    Lunch did happen and everything was totally fine bet we didn't talk about it for two minutes total

    Leave a comment:


  • ceyko
    replied
    Originally posted by mikec View Post
    Signed that two years or so ago...
    Same, made a huge difference. Those online petitions are awesome.

    Edit: So did the lunch happen and did everyone chill out or did it get out of hand?

    Leave a comment:


  • bcoop
    replied
    Originally posted by talisman View Post
    That's no way to talk about Mel!
    talking about my kiddo, jackass

    Leave a comment:


  • talisman
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by bcoop View Post
    I'll be there at 11:30 for the record. Or very close to it. I've got an appt @ 1, and have to renew my registration before picking up the shit burglar and heading to Austin.


    That's no way to talk about Mel!

    Leave a comment:


  • mikec
    replied
    Signed that two years or so ago...

    Leave a comment:


  • Baba Ganoush
    replied
    ^^^^It's been covered^^^^

    Reading ftw.




    Oh and....
    SIGN


    ..
    U
    Last edited by Baba Ganoush; 12-09-2011, 06:38 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lone Sailor
    replied
    Originally posted by gripenfelter View Post
    Anyone know how true this is?

    Texas legislature accidentally deletes penalty for failing to display a license plate.

    A number of special interest groups have fought over the design of specialty license plates in Texas over the past few weeks. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People cheered the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) board last month for rejecting a "Sons of Confederate Veterans" plate the group found racially offensive. An American Indian group blasted a plate honoring the Buffalo Soldiers, a regiment of black troops who served in the US Army from the end of the Civil War through 1951. These plate conflicts may turn out to be unnecessary because beginning on January 1, 2012, the use of license plates in the Lone Star State becomes optional.

    According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, current law mandates the display of two license plates -- one at the front and another at the rear of a vehicle. Failure to comply is a misdemeanor offense punishable by a $200 fine under Texas Code Section 502.404. As part of a sweeping revision of the state vehicle code, however, that provision will soon disappear.

    House Bill 2357 was intended as a non-controversial 234-page update to existing law. It passed the state House on May 29 voted 139-6 and the state Senate 31-0, receiving the signature of Governor Rick Perry (R) on June 17.

    "The motor vehicle statutes were codified in 1995, but there has not been a complete reorganization of substance since before that time," Representative Joseph Pickett (D-El Paso) wrote in his justification of the legislation. "This bill directly addresses the problem of the statutes being outdated in regard to automation and organization."

    As part of the update, the new law deleted the license plate statute, returning parts of it to Section 502.473 and 504.943. In moving around the legal language, the bill went through the entire legislative process without anybody noticing that a key line was deleted without providing a replacement: "An offense under this section is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed $200."

    Without the line, it is not clear whether police officers or courts would have the authority to impose a punishment on drivers who chose not to display license plates or registration stickers, especially in jurisdictions that still use red light cameras. Driving with a false or altered plate remains a misdemeanor, however. Lawmakers will not have a chance to remedy their mistake until January 8, 2013 when the legislature reconvenes, unless Governor Perry calls a special session specifically to address the license plate issue.

    A copy of the legislation as enacted is available in a 650k PDF file at the source link below.



    http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/36/3656.asp
    Looks like someone posted before reading the whole thread.

    Leave a comment:


  • gripenfelter
    replied
    Anyone know how true this is?

    Texas legislature accidentally deletes penalty for failing to display a license plate.

    A number of special interest groups have fought over the design of specialty license plates in Texas over the past few weeks. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People cheered the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) board last month for rejecting a "Sons of Confederate Veterans" plate the group found racially offensive. An American Indian group blasted a plate honoring the Buffalo Soldiers, a regiment of black troops who served in the US Army from the end of the Civil War through 1951. These plate conflicts may turn out to be unnecessary because beginning on January 1, 2012, the use of license plates in the Lone Star State becomes optional.

    According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, current law mandates the display of two license plates -- one at the front and another at the rear of a vehicle. Failure to comply is a misdemeanor offense punishable by a $200 fine under Texas Code Section 502.404. As part of a sweeping revision of the state vehicle code, however, that provision will soon disappear.

    House Bill 2357 was intended as a non-controversial 234-page update to existing law. It passed the state House on May 29 voted 139-6 and the state Senate 31-0, receiving the signature of Governor Rick Perry (R) on June 17.

    "The motor vehicle statutes were codified in 1995, but there has not been a complete reorganization of substance since before that time," Representative Joseph Pickett (D-El Paso) wrote in his justification of the legislation. "This bill directly addresses the problem of the statutes being outdated in regard to automation and organization."

    As part of the update, the new law deleted the license plate statute, returning parts of it to Section 502.473 and 504.943. In moving around the legal language, the bill went through the entire legislative process without anybody noticing that a key line was deleted without providing a replacement: "An offense under this section is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed $200."

    Without the line, it is not clear whether police officers or courts would have the authority to impose a punishment on drivers who chose not to display license plates or registration stickers, especially in jurisdictions that still use red light cameras. Driving with a false or altered plate remains a misdemeanor, however. Lawmakers will not have a chance to remedy their mistake until January 8, 2013 when the legislature reconvenes, unless Governor Perry calls a special session specifically to address the license plate issue.

    A copy of the legislation as enacted is available in a 650k PDF file at the source link below.



    Texas legislature accidentally deletes penalty for failing to display a license plate.

    Leave a comment:


  • mikec
    replied
    I love how fucking dysfunctional we are. From day to day there is no telling who will be at each others throats...

    Leave a comment:


  • idrivea4banger
    replied
    Dang I'm right down the road from Dino's

    Leave a comment:


  • bcoop
    replied
    I'll be there at 11:30 for the record. Or very close to it. I've got an appt @ 1, and have to renew my registration before picking up the shit burglar and heading to Austin.

    Leave a comment:


  • bcoop
    replied
    Originally posted by 03trubluGT View Post
    Now who's threatening?????
    That's not a threat. It's a fact. Ask the last arresting officers that arrested me with no cause how stupid they looked in court.


    SS Junk - I love you,

    Leave a comment:


  • SS Junk
    replied
    Originally posted by bcoop View Post
    Calling him out as a douchebag is whining? Hahahahaha. Fuck you.
    Exactly you fucking woman. Reads like you are getting a heaping helping of ginger stank rubbed all over that face of yours. Oh no! You were indirectly threatened! Cry!
    Someone wear a GoPro to this luncheon.

    Leave a comment:

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