Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
I am confused. If its not the folks who live here now who get to set policy, who is it?
I'd say it's pretty clear that the folks who live there now DON'T get to set the policy.
You don't get to move into a neighborhood and transform it just because YOU live there now. Life doesn't work that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
The city is enforcing the law in a discriminatory manner (favoring religion). It's a constitutional violation. Not to mention that it makes driving around places like Lincoln Park 100 times more dangerous because children can dart out from between parked cars. There's a reason there's no parking signs there.
Oh!!! The OUTRAGE!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
I am confused. If its not the folks who live here now who get to set policy, who is it?
I'd say it's pretty clear that the folks who live there now DON'T get to set the policy.
You don't get to move into a neighborhood and transform it just because YOU live there now. Life doesn't work that way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
I am confused. If its not the folks who live here now who get to set policy, who is it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Churches have some leeway in their parking.
and historically black congregations seem to have even more leeway, even though a lot of their worshippers no longer live in DC and drive in from the 'burbs.
Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
The city is enforcing the law in a discriminatory manner (favoring religion). It's a constitutional violation. Not to mention that it makes driving around places like Lincoln Park 100 times more dangerous because children can dart out from between parked cars. There's a reason there's no parking signs there.
Oh!!! The OUTRAGE!!!
Anonymous wrote:You must be new around here. Church goers in DC are not required to follow the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
The city is enforcing the law in a discriminatory manner (favoring religion). It's a constitutional violation. Not to mention that it makes driving around places like Lincoln Park 100 times more dangerous because children can dart out from between parked cars. There's a reason there's no parking signs there.
Oh!!! The OUTRAGE!!!
Anonymous wrote:Churches have some leeway in their parking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the way church parking has worked for decades.
Just because YOU live here now, doesn't mean you get to transform every detail of the neighborhood into something that fits your idea of how things "should be".
Those people at the church were parking like that 30 years before you bought your renovated, subdivided human filing cabinet with granite countertops and bamboo floors.
So just accept it as part of living in a city.
The city is enforcing the law in a discriminatory manner (favoring religion). It's a constitutional violation. Not to mention that it makes driving around places like Lincoln Park 100 times more dangerous because children can dart out from between parked cars. There's a reason there's no parking signs there.