Masshole Posted November 5, 2011 Posted November 5, 2011 Every time I see schnitzel it is attached to the word "weiner." Ich habe neine schnitzel? ###### it... 我不韋納有 Masshole... I will make sure I am within five feet of my legal guardian the next time you come to Boston.
Masshole Posted November 5, 2011 Posted November 5, 2011 So I went back to re-read what info Masshole provided and noticed this Allow myself to like myself.... Funny, yes. I do endorse what I say, but some people went through and marked comments down that should not be marked down. It never made sense to me, so I gave the post positive ratings to bring them back to neutral. The next time he comes to Boston? Massholes, weiners, and Boston. This is getting weird. Weird? Sounds like a good time, though only if the "weiners" you refer to are the kind you throw on the grill. I realise there is no good way to word that so I went with the one that is least likely to run one astray.
KWings06j Posted November 5, 2011 Posted November 5, 2011 Along the lines of the Avis claim... I had a rental car under my name during an exercise. The rental car was being traded among a group of people and I have no clue who was driving it on any given day (other than I only had it the first and last days). Anyhow Enterprise sent me a notice saying the car had been ticketed and is charging me a "processing fee". I have yet to receive the actual ticket. Is there any way to get out of this fee? I know I can't claim it on my travel voucher. I don't mind eating the fee if I have to but I'd rather not if there's a way out of it. Also anyone have advice on how to beat an out of state ticket like this when/if it does ever appear?
Fudge Posted December 3, 2011 Posted December 3, 2011 Great update to this thread. Although I'd probably go the "prove it was me/my wife" in the car route. The prosecution (state, city, etc) needs to prove you/your wife were/was operating the vehicle at that time. If they can't prove it, case dismissed on insufficient evidence. All the better if you have an alibi in this type of situation.
BQZip01 Posted December 3, 2011 Posted December 3, 2011 That isn't necessarily true oveseas. In some countries, you are responsible if you are the owner of the car (or in this case, the renter)
BFM this Posted April 16, 2012 Posted April 16, 2012 Clearly this line of defense was lifted from BODN...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now