Do you drive?

I'm too young. I hate being cars but when I'm old enough I'll get a license so if I need to I can drive.
 
CherryTree said:
I'm too young. I hate being cars but when I'm old enough I'll get a license so if I need to I can drive.
How can you hate being a car if you've never been one?

I'm too young to drive, and I'd probably get 10 tickets the first day I drive.
 
nook said:
CherryTree said:
I'm too young. I hate being cars but when I'm old enough I'll get a license so if I need to I can drive.
How can you hate being a car if you've never been one?

I'm too young to drive, and I'd probably get 10 tickets the first day I drive.
Lol.

Too young.
 
A year and a half or somethin', but I don't think I'll take the test for a good while, and besides, the waiting lists for the test is ridiculous here (like, half a year?)
 
coffeebean! said:
No
I know how to drive though and I can technically get my license this year. Too lazy though :T
Florida's screwed up, who would give an inanimate object a driving license?
 
John102 said:
coffeebean! said:
No
I know how to drive though and I can technically get my license this year. Too lazy though :T
Florida's screwed up, who would give an inanimate object a driving license?
That's why you stay away from here, Johneh boy >:3
 
A grandfather clause is an exception that allows an old rule to continue to apply to some existing situations, when a new rule will apply to all future situations. It is often used as a verb: to grandfather means to grant such an exemption. Frequently, the exemption is limited; it may extend for a set period of time, or it may be lost once a change is made. For example, a "grandfathered power plant" might be exempt from new, more restrictive pollution laws, which would be applied if the plant were expanded. Often, such a provision is used as a compromise, to effect new rules without upsetting a well-established logistical or political situation. This extends the idea of a rule not being retroactively applied.

So if you didn't read this you'll now understand, Grandfathers clause in Florida is about 18 years old or so to drive. Right? So when it starts people who haven't gotten there license or permit will have to wait the specific age requirement.
 
nook said:
CherryTree said:
I'm too young. I hate being cars but when I'm old enough I'll get a license so if I need to I can drive.
How can you hate being a car if you've never been one?

I'm too young to drive, and I'd probably get 10 tickets the first day I drive.
I mean physically being in a car at all, I've never tried to drive one. Cars have this car smell that always makes me feel a little sick, even if the car isn't moving.
 
Back
Top