OK, nothing unusual about this. I went to the US spy center in Montevideo to renew my exceptional blue travel document for ten years: 10 minutes and 110 dollars. Concluded with a stop at an obscure repair place in an obscure part of Montevideo to see about fixing a Kassel blender, used gift from Syd and Gundy, that I managed to burn out (trying to process egg shells as a garden supplement).
In between, about an hour finding the tire place, negotiating one-way streets, and getting new tires for USD 59 each, balanced and installed (175/70/R14). In our local shop, they’d be around USD 85 each. Nothing exceptional about this, except that I’m obviously taking pictures inside the shop: anathema to OSHA and all the safety-nanny-priests of the Great North.
If I’m stupid enough to go to the car jack, release it with my leg underneath to be crushed by the weight of the vehicle, well, then, by golly, maybe I have learned anew about cause and effect. Don’t tell OSHA that people tend not to be so stupid.
Or maybe, in “Murka,” coached by their lawyers, they do.
As it is, I move myself out of the traffic patterns of the guys doing the work, and watch with interest.
It works.
I agree there. A whole lot of work has been OSHA’d and EPA’d right out of the country.
I remember my father complaining about OSHA 40 years ago.
Am on my 2nd tag sale cuisinart that is used for grinding kitchen waste for the compost heap. Keeps on runnin’ like that battery bunny.
Sorry your grinderblender failed. Look for the biggest old cuisinart you can find. Will do the trick!
“Don’t tell OSHA that people tend not to be so stupid.”
In the news today, a kid from Georgia (or maybe Alabama), first day on the job with a tree removal/wood chipper company, decided to push the branches into the chipper with his foot. Chips people too!