Must be a left-wing stronghold district – IOTW Report

Must be a left-wing stronghold district

20 Comments on Must be a left-wing stronghold district

  1. Just count all the COEXIST bumper stickers to get a read on how many dumbed-down, White guilt-ridden, Birkenstock-wearing, bottled-water-drinking, Xanax-disabled, celebrity-worshipping, kumbaya-singing, Rainbow Plantation, Politically Correct, Good Fairy-Gay-obsessed, Socialist Liberal Lemmings there are in the town.

  2. @Mac – LOL!! I bet you could commit that to memory. It would make a fabulous all-purpose response to the next pro-leftist signature gatherer who approaches you!

    Comment: It’s bad enough that the trees aren’t in the planters, but look at where they did put the trees! Right in the middle of the sidewalk! Common sense totally flew the coup on that work crew. And the trees will die for lack of water. More American worker dollars down the drain. What a gyp (gip?).

  3. Slow- Russians at work.
    1. Engineering Department
    2. Puplic works Department
    3. Agricultural Department
    4. Environmental Department
    5. Department of Safety.

    Coming soon to the U.S.of A.

  4. I was stationed in Germany for nearly 10 years with the US Army. The plate is German, as are all the cars shown in the photo. The sidewalks are made with modern cobblestone and placed by hand. Where modifications need to be done, as where the trees are, each stone is cut by a craftsman with a stone saw. The trees in this photo will still obtain water as there is a crease between each stone which lets water seep through. As the tree grows, a cobblestone mason can simply remove stones and recut them and then replace them. As for why they put the large square boxes of open dirt near the roadway, I have only a guess. The Germans are FANATICS about the environment. When we were stationed in Wuerzburg, on a US military post, we had four recycle bins in the kitchen. One for glass, one for plastic, one for paper and one for kitchen waste like vegetable peelings. (The German government runs huge compost centers and creates fertilizer from all of the kitchen waste from everyone’s home.) These bins were mandated and the Army paid for a German to go around to each building and look in the dumpster to make sure all of the soldiers and their families were complying with the recycling laws. Failure to comply started at a $500.00 fine for a first offense and went up from there. So my guess is that the trees were growing before the sidewalk was put in and it was probably illegal to cut the trees down. So the trees will remain where they are until they die and then when they are replaced they’ll go where the city planners made space for them in the sidewalk. For your information, every German license plate has a city code where it was registered. Large cities use a single letter to designate themselves; B=Berlin, S=Stuttgart, etc. For smaller cities, two letters are used, towns get three letters. I found the AA code on the car in this photo indicates “Aalen Ostalbkreis”. This translates according to Wiki: “The Ostalbkreis is a district (Kreis) in the east of Baden-Württemberg, Germany, on the border to Bavaria. Neighboring districts are (from the north clockwise) Schwäbisch Hall, Ansbach, Donau-Ries, Heidenheim, Göppingen and Rems-Murr whose capitol is Aalen.” Hence the AA on the license plate. All that being said, your hypotheses listed above are still either true and/or funny. The link on the left under my name shows how Europeans think of sidewalks. As space is at such a premium, they don’t waste much of it. Parking on them is allowed almost everywhere. Running over strangers is not precisely what the sign indicates, FYI.

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