8 hours is incredibly fast to lay that much track.
8 hours is incredibly fast to lay that much track.
Also, there are 4 times the people as the US living more densly.
That’s hard to imagine.
So they’re all gone and isn’t an option til someone leaves, first come first served.
Or just rotate it to direction of travel if it’s for a route. After a turn is shown it would switch to forward is up.
That’s what I mean, that it’s more likely to get lost/stolen/destroyed in my hands, if I were to bet.
I would not have kept it this long. I remember being mad it was gone when it hit $1000, because that seemed insane. It’s realistic to think I would have sold then.
Are you Japanese or did you move there and live on land?
I did already get burned by an exchange obviously, but I think I trust myself even less with cold storage lol.
This seems to be the majority opinion. I’m thinking moving the majority to sound investments is my likely course. I do think keeping a little that wouldn’t sting badly to lose still scratches the itch without risking regret.
You can put a hitch on a Corolla too.
It’s a support for cops thing, blue bulb in front.
This but unironically
Jake brakes in big trucks, but most of them do show brake lights now even though you just coast to activate them. Some drivers like to turn them off because it makes you look like a dangerous rookie in the mountains if your brake lights are on consistently while going downhill.
Reach out if you’re interested in blue collar work. I’ll give you my number and you can call even. I can advise from personal experience on truck driving, water/wastewater treatment careers, or railroad work.
Truck driving has the benefit of being able to cut expenses to near zero by going over the road if you have few obligations. Getting a cushion this way makes settling down and going local much easier, even though I make more local than I ever did over the road.
I don’t haul freight anymore either, and I don’t think that’s a long-term good prospect. Blue collar jobs where you work with the truck but have onsite work with it are a bit more resilient against automation I believe. Think wastewater cleaning, railroad, lineman, heavy haul, etc.
Taste the paper
Oh wow what a relief bro, thanks.
Common in Texas, or sometimes sliced longways and called Texas toothpicks.
It’s common at my job, blue collar where I can see little snippets of what the bros are up to and have an idea what’s going on where with the location tag they all add.
Big group at work blew up though, cause someone started showing management, so it’s more one-on-one now.
Like how a million Floridians evacuated lol