If you're on a DOT regulated road, there is no religious exemption for metal spike tractor wheels (you can't use them) and orange triangles on buggies (you have to have one).
I think if the intent is there in 99% of their life, it counts enough.
They aren't movie Amish pretending that technology and the outside world doesn't exist. Most seem to comply to the minimum to coexist with the rest of society and then go home.
Okay, so there was an incident I recall maybe 25 years ago where one omlet drove his metal spiked tractor down a freshly paved asphalt highway, doing roughly a million dollars in damages.
Now he went to jail for that, but then did it again when they fixed the road.
As far as I'm aware there is STILL an order up to this day that if the county sheriffs dept see him on a county road in his lifetime the supervisors want him arrested on sight as a public nusiance.
I think there is an amount of dickishness inherent with being Amish to begin with, so that checks out. Every single one I've met's personality STARTS at "old man who hates everything that isn't exactly his routine" and then goes from there.
But most complied, albeit begrudgingly, with any law or order when they are out in the world.
i remember when I was younger and lived in PA, i would witness "Mennonite Out", which they all went to walmart in their Ford Econoline vans and buy stuff. You would see a guys beard coming around a corner before the rest of him did.
Eh.....
It depends on the order.
I know this much:
If you're on a DOT regulated road, there is no religious exemption for metal spike tractor wheels (you can't use them) and orange triangles on buggies (you have to have one).
I think if the intent is there in 99% of their life, it counts enough.
They aren't movie Amish pretending that technology and the outside world doesn't exist. Most seem to comply to the minimum to coexist with the rest of society and then go home.
The bunch I know were dicks about it.
Okay, so there was an incident I recall maybe 25 years ago where one omlet drove his metal spiked tractor down a freshly paved asphalt highway, doing roughly a million dollars in damages.
Now he went to jail for that, but then did it again when they fixed the road.
As far as I'm aware there is STILL an order up to this day that if the county sheriffs dept see him on a county road in his lifetime the supervisors want him arrested on sight as a public nusiance.
I think there is an amount of dickishness inherent with being Amish to begin with, so that checks out. Every single one I've met's personality STARTS at "old man who hates everything that isn't exactly his routine" and then goes from there.
But most complied, albeit begrudgingly, with any law or order when they are out in the world.
Honestly? That's hilarious.
I also see amish vehicles using electric turnsignals on their wagons on the road when they come into town.
certain counties require it in order for them to be on roads. Also those may be Mennonites instead.
mennonites are also pretty cool people.
productive, in touch with nature and reality.
i remember when I was younger and lived in PA, i would witness "Mennonite Out", which they all went to walmart in their Ford Econoline vans and buy stuff. You would see a guys beard coming around a corner before the rest of him did.
there's a mennonite store near here
they have great shit that's all semi-local
Some states required lights of some sort to be on public highways. The reflective orange slow-moving sign is also required in some areas.