DILLARD000
Well-Known Member
Is this another "pointless thread"???
No, no, of course not!
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Is this another "pointless thread"???
Apes? Not sure I believe that; at least the last 5 generations of my family walked upright; got pictures to prove it !!!Humans are only here because the scumdogs of the universe came here and had their way with apes.
Apes? Not sure I believe that; at least the last 5 generations of my family walked upright; got pictures to prove it !!!
Chapter 1
I............................Got.........................................Nothing.
(working on Chapter 2)
That's really quite a story Garth, sorry I didn't mention it sooner. You were in some good company all around. I grew up in Ft Worth due to our small family farm not providing enough to raise a family and my father taking us there to live. Dad had a cabinet shop there for several years. In the 3rd grade my Mom kept me out of school one day and put a pallet in the car for me to act ill while we went to a nearby community and it seemed a parade of some sort. I very well recall LBJs big cowboy hat and to some extent JFK's limo. As we pulled into the driveway at home a neighbor came running out crying to tell Mom JFK had been shot.My uncle was a mechanical genius even as a child. He built his own radios as a boy, eventually became a mechanical engineer who helped design missile guidance systems to win WWII. When you went to his house he had a half dozen cuckoo clocks he restored on display. He even had a working pinball machine and an HO railroad set that measured about 10 x 30 in the basement. It had banks of switch tracks and it astonished all the relatives at Thanksgiving. He eventually rose to be the Vice President of General Dynamics, an aerospace company based in New Jersey.
When I grew up in Manhattan, the best I could do was to have a small railroad set with 4 switch tracks. I did however do all the work on my bicycles and refinished a couple of old wooden bookcases. I rebuilt my first engine on an old MGB the first year I got my drivers license, but my economic situation being what it was I could only earn a two year Associate college degree while working days. I wanted to become a mechanical engineer but I struggled with advanced math, like calculus, and chemistry was a bore to me. Eventually, I did pass the test to build the Apache helicopter for Teledyne Ryan in San Diego, but I never took the job because I had previously agreed to give Hyatt hotels a two week notice where I worked as a wine steward. By that time, they had offered the job to someone else farther down the list of exam scores. When you snooze you lose they told me. Without an advanced college degree I always had to take lesser jobs than my famous uncle. I finished my career doing spot checks on taxi cabs and school buses as a transportation officer in Miami's Dade County.
I wish my uncle could have seen how self taught I managed to rewire a house or two, do basic plumbing jobs and spectacular landscaping with the aid of my Kubota tractor. We even have a four thousand gallon waterfall fish pond, fully landscaped that my wife and I designed. My uncle would be proud. Working with your hands is a skill sorely lacking in most people who drive around thinking that "modern cars are too complex to work on". What a bunch of b.s. ! In many ways, these old Ford Rangers are easier to work on. You'll never have to rebuild a carburetor, or set points, and nowadays the finicky rear drum brakes have all but disappeared, but I'll leave automatic transmission work to the bravest amongst us. Clutches and pressure plates are tricky enough. Sometimes, it makes sense to let someone else do the work. My wife was a trained carpenter in Germany, but she's too busy to do that kind of work now. She did just help me lay a bamboo floor in the upstairs guest room yesterday. Those German high standard they are so famous for left her busy looking for some "flubs" in the baseboards I covered up with a little caulk. It will never be seen - no one will ever know. I bet there are even a few flubs being passed over today at Teledyne Ryan.
The mechanic in the stall beside me took over as parts manager a few months before I started running the shop. We'd eat lunch together at his desk in the parts room and he talked some about Viet Nam. He said the area where their tents were set up was surrounded by a chain link fence with a locked gate. Local kids would come in and do little chores like shining shoes, etc, in exchange for candy bars or cash. Then a kid who everyone knew came in and the guards didn't stop him, he walked to the tent that served as a barracks and detonated the bomb he was wearing. After that kids weren't allowed inside the fence, if they made it through the gate they were told to stop, if they didn't stop they were shot. He said it was hard to shoot a kid. I'm thankful I did get sent there.i am glad i never got sent to any of the war zone stuff when i was in the army. my stepdad never mentioned anything about vietnam till one day we were outside having some beers after work and playing basketball. then he told me a whole bunch of stuff about being a door gunner on a huey and you had to shoot anything that moved because kids would shoot rockets at you and old women would shoot at you. he said he changed jobs as soon as his first enlistment was up so he could get away from that. a guy at work said the same thing, it was horrible because he had to shoot kids and older folks
The mechanic in the stall beside me took over as parts manager a few months before I started running the shop. We'd eat lunch together at his desk in the parts room and he talked some about Viet Nam. He said the area where their tents were set up was surrounded by a chain link fence with a locked gate. Local kids would come in and do little chores like shining shoes, etc, in exchange for candy bars or cash. Then a kid who everyone knew came in and the guards didn't stop him, he walked to the tent that served as a barracks and detonated the bomb he was wearing. After that kids weren't allowed inside the fence, if they made it through the gate they were told to stop, if they didn't stop they were shot. He said it was hard to shoot a kid. I'm thankful I did get sent there.
Chapter 1
I............................Got.........................................Nothing.
(working on Chapter 2)