- 28 Oct 2010 03:24
#13535878
Yes, of course. Generally, most of the time, this is true.
But on Saturday and Sundays - when everyone is home - the din of lawn mowers, cars, and other noises is pretty constant.
Just on those off-times when you can relax in the burbs, your neighbors are building a shack with power tools, mowing their lawn, or playing their stereos outside, or a dog is barking.
Between 9 and 5, they are generally silent. But if you work, who cares. It's the off times that are important, and because the burbs force you to stay at home because there are no third spaces within easy walking distance, you end up finding noisy obsessions for your neighbors to listen to all day.
Bon Jovi blaring in the background, Jarlaxle climbed out of his tricked out Chevy Suburban and wrote:Most residential neighborhoods are much quieter than a major city
Yes, of course. Generally, most of the time, this is true.
But on Saturday and Sundays - when everyone is home - the din of lawn mowers, cars, and other noises is pretty constant.
Just on those off-times when you can relax in the burbs, your neighbors are building a shack with power tools, mowing their lawn, or playing their stereos outside, or a dog is barking.
Between 9 and 5, they are generally silent. But if you work, who cares. It's the off times that are important, and because the burbs force you to stay at home because there are no third spaces within easy walking distance, you end up finding noisy obsessions for your neighbors to listen to all day.
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The goal is to use Afghanistan to wash money out of the tax bases of the US and Europe through Afghanistan and back into the hands of a transnational security elite.
The goal is an endless war, not a successful war.
— Julian Assange
The goal is to use Afghanistan to wash money out of the tax bases of the US and Europe through Afghanistan and back into the hands of a transnational security elite.
The goal is an endless war, not a successful war.
— Julian Assange