Pet Peeves

My wife used to get upset when I didn't lock my car. I actually got a cop to persuade her that it didn't make sense to lock an old Tracker with a fabric top. First of all, no one wants to steal it. Secondly, leaving the doors unlocked prevents the fabric from being cut. Leaving the key in the ignition might be another matter, particularly when my house key is on the same ring.
 
I wouldn't be as upset if not for the fact that they come through four times a day to plow the sidewalk on the other side of the street and they regularly break down the snowbank, hauling it away on the other side of the street. On my side of the street, all they do is shovel the crap from the street onto my driveway and sidewalks. Not once during a typical winter do they run their sidewalk plow on my side of the road and I am lucky if they ever take the snow away from the embankment that builds up between the street and my property. In the past 20 years, I think they've hauled the snow away from my side of the street no more than three times.
Go to a city council meeting and shake your cane at them.
 
Like Beth said, I never gave it much thought either, but I just considered the coast guard to be the “water version” of the border patrol, which makes them law enforcement and not military. If they were military, then people could be drafted into the CG, just like the army , and I don’t remember ever hearing that this happens.
In any case, it is certainly not something that I would call a pet peeve, @Don Alaska , so I have no problem with whichever you want to call it.

I am thinking about this, and I don’t think that i have any pet peeves.
I have been reading the list of things that bother everyone else, and those things might be happening in my life, too; but they are just small stuff to me, and not something I dwell on .

I could care less if drawers are shut or lights are left on , etc. I just take care of it and forget it. I think Bobby must be the same way because he puts up with living with me, and doesn’t grumble. I don’t remember my mom or dad grumbling either.
In my life, any day that the sky is not falling, is a good day.
I call it a pet peeve @Yvonne Smith. Some of the military make fun of the Air Force too, but the Air Force folks generally laugh it off and even make fun of themselves. I was talking with a vet in a waiting room and the subject of Vietnam came up. He said he was in Danang but he wasn't in the military since he was in the Air Force. An Army vet told an Air Force pilot the the Air Force is "kinda like the military but it isn't". The pilot just laughed it off. Coasties don't do that. They know they aren't in the military but the SOOO want to be. It is something that just bothers me. I call it one of my pet peeves.

Like you said, they are more like the Border Patrol, but the BP is not ashamed of who they are. The Coast Guard seems to be ashamed of being law enforcement.
 
Yes, the Coast Guard drafted during WWII and the Vietnam conflict.
The Coast Guard does become military during major wars, but routinely they are law enforcement and search and rescue, both vital and important functions. I didn't know they drafted, especially during Vietnam. I never knew anyone drafted into either the Coast Guard or the Air Force, and the Navy drafted very few. Most were drafted into the Army or Marines.
 
I am so cranky that it seems everything peeves me. Most recently... my husband puts his keys and wallet in a drawer of a hutch next to the back door. For some reason, he never closes that drawer completely--so every time I walk past I push the drawer closed. Seriously??? Just CLOSE THE DANG DRAWER. 🤬
My hubby does not throw things away. He rumples up a bread bag and leaves it on the counter. I think that was his up bringing before baggies were a thing. But he will leave tops to empty things on the counter. twist ties, tips of items he cut off to open them....
The garbage is under the sink... FOUR FEET AWAY
 
The Millinocket Public Works Department's snowplowing practices. Every winter, I have a much harder time cleaning up after them than I do the snow itself. They can turn even a moderate snowstorm into a 24-hour ordeal by burying my driveway and sidewalk every time they pass by with the plow. After the snow stopped yesterday, I had everything cleared, as far as my driveway, sidewalk, and other paths. Although there was no additional snow, they managed to pack my driveway and sidewalks with slush that froze solid overnight, and I can't even chip it away today. Although there was no further snow, they spent the night moving slush from the road onto the driveways and sidewalks.

This isn't a one-time thing. That's what they do every winter. The town has a sidewalk plow, but they have never once, as far as I have seen, used it on my side of the street. On the other side of the street, they routinely plow the sidewalk after every snowfall and scoop snowbanks into their truck to haul away, but we're fortunate if they do that even once during a winter on our side of the street. By the end of winter, we can't even see over the snowbank to tell if a car is coming, which is a problem, especially for my wife, who insists on parking forward in the driveway, meaning she then has to back out blindly onto the road.

If I can't shovel my snow into the road, then they shouldn't be able to plow their snow into my driveway. If they refuse to clear the sidewalks on my side of the road, then they shouldn't bury them with snow and slush every time they pass by. I don't expect them to plow my driveway, but neither should they block it. Frequently, I have shoveled the driveway so that we could get out to go the store or somewhere, only to find that, on my return, I have shovel the entrance to the driveway again, because the plow had gone by.

We rented a house in Fort Kent, Maine, a few years ago while I was working on our camp, and the Fort Kent Public Works Department didn't do that. After a large snowstorm, they would indeed focus on clearing the road, which meant temporarily blocking driveways, but once the roads were clear, they would clear the snow that they might have plowed into people's driveways. In fact, one day, we had a snowstorm while I was checking on our house in Millinocket, leaving Michelle alone in Fort Kent. She was trying to shovel the driveway herself, which she generally wouldn't do, and the Public Works guy stopped the plow and cleared the driveway for her. No one expects that, but he did.

However, in Millinocket, rather than cleaning up after themselves, they will spend the night scraping the streets onto everyone's driveways and sidewallks.
Is there no town council meeting you can bring this up to? You pay taxes. If you don't get the service paid for you should get a discount. We always have a berm at the head of our driveway to deal with but so does everyone else. I would be angry if the other side of the road never did. We don't have sidewalks. The younger guys don't have the skill to clean the road the way the retired guys did. Mostly we are happy our mailboxes are still standing.
 
My hubby does not throw things away. He rumples up a bread bag and leaves it on the counter. I think that was his up bringing before baggies were a thing. But he will leave tops to empty things on the counter. twist ties, tips of items he cut off to open them....
The garbage is under the sink... FOUR FEET AWAY
I like how "they" leave chip crumbs in a bag and put it back in the pantry. Or leave 2 squares of toilet paper on the roll or a tablespoon of milk in a gallon jug. Like Krystal, my list could get quite lengthy here.
 
A pet peeve is a minor annoyance that an individual finds particularly irritating to a degree larger than the norm, but not necessarily to the point of anger. What are your pet peeves? Most of us have more than one.
People who post nonsense about the Yellowstone Hot Spot. Yvonne has seen how I react to that. With barrage of known facts.

People who go to any National Park that won't follow Safety Laws. Such as the National Park Service has a list of absolute no-nos that people ignore all the time, and sometimes they pay for it big time. (And I'm not talking just about large fines, either.) Yellowstone has quite a list that many National Parks don't have, such as personal behavior as thermal areas. When you go through the park entrance, you get a complete list. But we've already discussed that lately... People don't read the warnings, and at times that stupidity can cost them their life, or some innocent wild critter it's life. But in Yellowstone, violating safety laws can also get you a trip to Federal Court and sent to jail somewhere you probably would want to be.

So I guess one of my pet peeves is people who suffer from terminal stupidity. When I lived in Yellowstone, I bought a t-shirt at the Yellowstone Savage Shop win West Yellowstone, Montana. It had a picture of Boo-Boo Bear on it, and said "This isn't Jellystone, so don't be like Yogi. Do what Mr. Ranger says."


Boo-Boo_Bear.png
 
My pet peeve is two step verification. When I check my Spectrum email now, I put in my password then they require me to receive a code by phone or email. I suppose it's to protect me, but my computer has a PIN, and nobody knows it except me and my DIL.

This just started recently. I don't remember asking for it. It's not earth shatteringly important, but it is annoying.
 
According to Gemini my AI .... when asked about them being military he said this:
Yes, the United States Coast Guard (USCG) is absolutely considered a military branch.
It is one of the six branches of the U.S. Armed Forces (alongside the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space Force). However, it is unique because it is the only military branch that does not reside within the Department of Defense during peacetime.

Much more but this I guess answers the question
 
My pet peeve is two step verification. When I check my Spectrum email now, I put in my password then they require me to receive a code by phone or email. I suppose it's to protect me, but my computer has a PIN, and nobody knows it except me and my DIL.

This just started recently. I don't remember asking for it. It's not earth shatteringly important, but it is annoying.
Just tossin' this out there... but the PIN on your computer doesn't make any difference unless someone steals it. The 2FA is to protect you from the Nigerian Prince thousands of miles away who has somehow obtained your email address and password on the Dark Web. He can't log in to your account even though he has your credentials, because he can't respond to the 2FA without the code they send. (And I agree, it is very annoying but scammers take the fun out of everything.)
 
My pet peeve is two step verification. When I check my Spectrum email now, I put in my password then they require me to receive a code by phone or email. I suppose it's to protect me, but my computer has a PIN, and nobody knows it except me and my DIL.

This just started recently. I don't remember asking for it. It's not earth shatteringly important, but it is annoying.
The only places I have that requires it are medical providers and my financial institutions. I don't mind it in these instances. There are others I use that offer it (Amazon pesters you for it), and a couple I think are considering requiring it. I'm on a huge forum that is considering it. The majority of members said they would not be back if it happened. The concern is that nobody's database is perfectly secure, and it will stink bad enough that hackers would have my name, my address and my email address. I do not want then having my cell number.

Honestly, if my email provider offered it, I would use a different service. But lots of places are making this mandatory. Eventually we will not be able to avoid it. There are already hacking train wrecks. This will make them worse.
 
When I check my Spectrum email now, I put in my password then they require me to receive a code by phone or email.
I have Spectrum too, and I have the same thing. If you have memory problems like I do, put all your passwords, etc., or anything else that is important that you might forget in a text file, on a portable USB drive that is not always plugged in. Thieves can steal something from your computer that is not on your computer...
 
According to Gemini my AI .... when asked about them being military he said this:
Yes, the United States Coast Guard (USCG) is absolutely considered a military branch.
It is one of the six branches of the U.S. Armed Forces (alongside the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space Force). However, it is unique because it is the only military branch that does not reside within the Department of Defense during peacetime.

Much more but this I guess answers the question
If you rely on AI for answers, you may find out all kinds of other stuff. Is the Border Patrol military also? They don't have boats but they have guns and stuff. I still believe the Coast Guard's main mission is not to blow stuff up and kill people. If you so believe, then what can I say? I am guessing you were a Coastie of are somehow associated with them, right?
 
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