Like bike lanes on major roads, lol! |
Call me crazy, but cars are allowed to be on the road, an abandoned toy is not. |
File a police report |
According to whom? You? I assume the only difference in your broken brain is that you personally get some benefit out of placing your private property in a publicly owned space, so cars are okie dokie, but because you have no use for a basketball hoop someone else’s private property in a public space is a nuisance… |
Do you have cameras trained on the hoops? Do you sit in your living room staring out your front window intently watching these hoops all day? I rarely see my neighbors drive their cars, but that doesn’t mean they rarely drive them, and it certainly doesn’t mean I’m going to try to get their cars towed. |
No that's too weak. Need to call in the SWAT team. This is a menace, after all. Has to be dealt with definitively. Or just get the tire slashing neighbor on it. |
Yes, "no" is the issue--if the street doesn't belong to you can't encumber it with a part of your stuff |
We get it, you hate cars. |
You don't need to look out the window -- bouncing basketballs are very, very loud. |
Exactly! So stop parking your car on the street! |
The new progressive priority is to use roads for everything but cars (restaurants, bike lanes, vendors, park benches), as if municipalities are going to pay to maintain nicely paved surfaces for this purpose in the long run. |
Just roll it back in front of their house. |
The basketball hoop blocks parking, that is the point. Yes you want a new world order where people don't drive and park but currently roads are for the convenience and purpose of driving and parking. |
You didn’t say you rarely hear anyone using them, you said you rarely see anyone using them… maybe they are being considerate and using those new fangled extra bouncy foam basketballs. My neighbor owns an EV. I never hear him use it. I guess that means it’s abandoned. |
You want the right to use public space to store your personal possessions but you also want to deny your neighbors the right to use public space to store their personal possessions. |