If you think putting a basketball hoop in the street in front of another's house is ok, where does it stop? What other items are ok to put in the street? I thought the street was for cars, either driving or parked, so please enlighten. |
NP. Oh shit you totally schooled PP! If she said see instead of hear that totally negates the fact that every neighbor can hear every single time anyone is playing basketball right outside |
The poster was stating what she believes to be true, presumably because she wants it to be true (that the basketball hoops are rarely used). The poster was not stating what she knows to be true, because as she demonstrated with just the tiniest push back against her assertion, she does not know that the hoops are rarely used. Unless she’s actively monitoring these hoops all day for days on end, she has no clue. (i.e. the “hoops are rarely used” poster was talking out of her a$$) Hope this helps! |
I would move it in front of the house it belongs to each and every time it was placed in front of our house. |
Well it looks like the basketball hoop owner has found this thread. |
Technically it’s illegal to put something in the road. Just like those green signs that say “ Slow Children playing” on them.
However, the police arent going around enforcing those rules. This seems like a neighbor problem. Homeowner whose house it’s in front of needs to ask them to move it if it’s theirs. |
You are not going to make me feel stupid with your gotcha semantic games. I think roads are for cars and parking, you want things to change and have them be used for everything and anything. You are not going to convince me that I am insane and do not understand logic or reality. Just say you disagree and you want current practice to change, but your rhetorical questions are not going to me me say hmm he is right, I don't know what I was thinking, I wasn't thinking clearly. |
Everyone anywhere nearby knows when someone is playing basketball. You conceded this when you said the kids must be using new-fangled foam balls, because even you know normal bballs make a ton of noise. Anyone who works from home is well aware of any basketball happening on their block. |
Well now I admit you’ve got me wondering. ARE streets for cars, driving or parked? May people ride bicycles in the streets? Scooters? May we walk in the streets? May children draw with chalk in the streets? What about skateboards, are those okay? I did a half hearted search for Arlington’s fair use guidelines pertaining to streets but came up empty handed, so please enlighten ME as to how many laws my family is breaking when we use the streets without a car. |
Unless the kids are using the new fangled foam balls, as you just mentioned. I don’t understand why this is so difficult for you. But this argument is also funny because you are essentially complaining that the hoops are unused and so shouldn’t be there because they are a nuisance, even though by your own admission you never hear or see anyone using them… so is the lack of noise the nuisance? They’re taking up valuable real estate where a car could be idling? |
You’re apparently confusing me with someone else. My main complaint is - why can’t you put your basketball hoop in front of your own house? |
The rhetorical questions again...just make it easy for us....tell us what you want us to think, then we can say yes or no, we will now on think this. |
No one is complaining to you, ask if you are so important that you need convincing. |
In a cul de sac in front of their own home, fine. Anywhere else and in front of someone else's house, hell no. |
Thou doth protest too much. Despite your insistence that you won’t change your mind, your post indicates that you do indeed “get it” on some level. I suspect that you’re a bit hot under the collar right now and are simply too proud to admit that you were wrong, not even to yourself. And for the record, I am not trying to make you feel stupid. I am trying to point out the logical inconsistency of your argument. |