The same thing happened to me once when I was a skinny 15 yr old kid riding a big dirt-bike. I was struggling to get it out of the deep mud when a stranger in a car saw me, stopped his car, waded out into the mud and helped me push it out, getting himself covered in mud in the process. I was so amazed that someone would do that for a complete stranger that the memory of it has stuck with me to this day.
If you think that sort of this happens rarely enough that it must be staged, you have MUCH more faith in the training of our cops than I do.
They're all low-IQ idiots who only know which end of the gun flings hot lead if they've invested their own time into firearms practice and training. Which most of them don't.
It's no surprise at all that most of them can't drive worth a damn either.
In the US, do they have special parking spaces for the mentally handicapped? In Canada, they just put Liberal Party stickers in their window...... sorry, they say "baby on board."
#2 Yea, can't even count the number of times that I've bonked my head on ladders or whatnot on the job site.
One day, we were working on upgrading the instrumentation package on a gas wellhead. The fence around the separator buildings had sunk, so the gate frame was only about six feet off the ground. I hit my head on the damn thing at least five times that day. Just low enough to hit, just high enough to not see. Glad I had a hard hat!
Wouldn't have been so bad, but we'd been doing the same thing every day for at least a month at that point, so we were all running more or less on autopilot anyway. Great for getting stuff done quickly and efficiently, not so much for adapting to changed circumstances.
Still the only oilfield work I've done, and the only work where everything had to be explosion proof. (Which mostly means "sealed against gas infiltration" and "power supply low enough energy to NOT make sparks hot enough to ignite them.")
#3 Saw this happen 1/2 mile out in the middle of a drained lake. Took the guy two days to get his bike out...
ReplyDeleteThe same thing happened to me once when I was a skinny 15 yr old kid riding a big dirt-bike. I was struggling to get it out of the deep mud when a stranger in a car saw me, stopped his car, waded out into the mud and helped me push it out, getting himself covered in mud in the process. I was so amazed that someone would do that for a complete stranger that the memory of it has stuck with me to this day.
Deletetry it with a 30,000 # trac loader.......good times
Delete7. Cheap
ReplyDeleteChinese
Crap
-lg
Looks more like a set up, someone took the screen cover off the fan and probably took out the screws.
DeleteCould someone explain the cop car pile up? Staged for movie?
ReplyDeleteSecret Service training
DeleteIf you think that sort of this happens rarely enough that it must be staged, you have MUCH more faith in the training of our cops than I do.
DeleteThey're all low-IQ idiots who only know which end of the gun flings hot lead if they've invested their own time into firearms practice and training. Which most of them don't.
It's no surprise at all that most of them can't drive worth a damn either.
JohnG
And we all know who will be found liable in court, for all the damage they caused to those police cars.
DeleteIf there was ever a reason I needed to like dogs. It's because Muzloids don't like dogs. #1.
ReplyDeleteDBag Cyclists eating shit = FTW.
ReplyDelete#2- just love that glass resting on the aluminum ladder….can you spell stress fracture..??
ReplyDelete#10 found the cesspit.
ReplyDelete#9 cement curb higher than down stroke of pedal. Bite you every time.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I wondered what he had hit.
DeleteMichael in Nelson
#2 - Pull your head out of your butt woman!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDelete#6 - They certainly are handicapped.
ReplyDeleteIn the US, do they have special parking spaces for the mentally handicapped?
DeleteIn Canada, they just put Liberal Party stickers in their window...... sorry, they say "baby on board."
#2 Yea, can't even count the number of times that I've bonked my head on ladders or whatnot on the job site.
ReplyDeleteOne day, we were working on upgrading the instrumentation package on a gas wellhead. The fence around the separator buildings had sunk, so the gate frame was only about six feet off the ground. I hit my head on the damn thing at least five times that day. Just low enough to hit, just high enough to not see. Glad I had a hard hat!
Wouldn't have been so bad, but we'd been doing the same thing every day for at least a month at that point, so we were all running more or less on autopilot anyway. Great for getting stuff done quickly and efficiently, not so much for adapting to changed circumstances.
Still the only oilfield work I've done, and the only work where everything had to be explosion proof. (Which mostly means "sealed against gas infiltration" and "power supply low enough energy to NOT make sparks hot enough to ignite them.")
john G
Did you consider dangling caution tape from it?
Delete# 10. another good day on the farm--- I didn't see it, do it again- spitting beer out on myself.
ReplyDeletelife is good when you live it.
Kinda scary. 18 inches of water maybe and she flips the quad upside down on top of herself. Goos thing someone was there recording.
ReplyDelete1: GOOD BOY
ReplyDelete2: I've done stuff like this too many times to make a smart ass comment here.
4: "There's the hot tennis chick, act smooth."