carguy123 wrote: I'm wondering when this became illegal and in what states? I know it's legal in Arkansas!
You're making this too easy.
chuckles wrote:carguy123 wrote: I'm wondering when this became illegal and in what states? I know it's legal in Arkansas!You're making this too easy.
chuckles wrote:carguy123 wrote: I'm wondering when this became illegal and in what states? I know it's legal in Arkansas!You're making this too easy.
Reverse beastality?
Apexcarver wrote:
I think that would solve the problem of having wildlife in your neighborhood, more than it would solve the problem of loud music.
True Story:
My grandma walked out of the department store she was at, and successfully got into her Late 80s Olds. When she went to start it tho, the ignition was stuck. She called AAA to come take a look. A locksmith was then dispatched to have a look at the ignition when AAA guy was unable to help. About 3 hours after the whole shebang started, a guy walked up to the scene and asked what was going on in his car?
Turns out the door key was an exact match, but the ignition key was different. Both white Oldsmobiles, Gma just forgot where she had parked, and thought that was her car. Before the days of chipped keys and OEM security systems, GM keys repeated about once in every 10k sets produced. Just a wild coincidence that two sets of identical tumblers made it into the doors of 2 white Olds of the same year that ended up in the same city.
I remember the '57 Chev's not needing a key to start .. depending where you left the ignition switch when you got out
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