Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. They also can't churn butter or send Morse code.
Haha, this. Anyone saying it's a life skill better also be teaching them to ride a horse to work, since both have the same amount of relevance today.
I actually tried to buy my last car as a manual (I don't live in the DMV, traffic there is awful and i never would drive it there) but it cost more, was going to take longer to get, and it took 4 dealerships before one said they could do it. It is absolutely not relevant except "for fun" today.
Anonymous wrote:It's almost impossible to find a manual in the US, and even in Europe most new purchases are automatics. I think it's a useful skill, but if I ever decide to give up my Mini Cooper, I will have almost no options (beyond maybe Subaru and VW) for a manual transmission in a daily driver.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. They also can't churn butter or send Morse code.
Haha, this. Anyone saying it's a life skill better also be teaching them to ride a horse to work, since both have the same amount of relevance today.
I actually tried to buy my last car as a manual (I don't live in the DMV, traffic there is awful and i never would drive it there) but it cost more, was going to take longer to get, and it took 4 dealerships before one said they could do it. It is absolutely not relevant except "for fun" today.
Anonymous wrote:It's so fun to drive a manual! I feel like Mario Andretti.
Anonymous wrote:No, it's 2021. I don't know how to drive a stick shift. We live in an urban area, why would anyone need that knowledge? Having a stick shift around DC is a terrible idea. If you live in Montana or something with lots of open roads, okay, but not in a city or dense suburbs. What's the point?
I grew up in similarly dense suburbs, and I didn't know a single person who had a stick shift, and no one I was friends with knew how to drive one - and this was back in the 90s. I can't imagine it's become more widespread, unless you're like a committed car enthusiast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. They also can't churn butter or send Morse code.
Haha, this. Anyone saying it's a life skill better also be teaching them to ride a horse to work, since both have the same amount of relevance today.
I actually tried to buy my last car as a manual (I don't live in the DMV, traffic there is awful and i never would drive it there) but it cost more, was going to take longer to get, and it took 4 dealerships before one said they could do it. It is absolutely not relevant except "for fun" today.
Anonymous wrote:No. They also can't churn butter or send Morse code.
Anonymous wrote:No. They also can't churn butter or send Morse code.