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Re: How many are we?

To: jonmac@ndirect.co.uk, fot@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: How many are we?
From: WEmery7451@aol.com
Date: Sat, 12 Feb 2000 14:00:04 EST
In a message dated 2/11/00 2:04:59 PM Pacific Standard Time, 
jonmac@ndirect.co.uk writes:

<< Depending on the individual, we usually follow through and ask why they 
are so anti-club.
 More often than not, the reply is along the lines "I'm sure the club is 
helpful but I have
 no wish to meet the people who populate them. Enthusiasts fine - but 'nerds' 
NO!" There is
 a general perception by the non-club member in the UK that those who do take 
an active
 part in the UK club scene are one of the lowest forms of life. This may be a 
"class" thing
 at which *skill* we, as a nation, have honed to some perfection. Certainly, 
there are
 'nerds' out there - but this is not restricted to car clubs. 

Maybe the British nerds are different from the US nerds.  When I hear the 
word nerd, I think of a brainy geek sitting behind a computer all day and 
night (taking naps in the chair) trying to input viruses and trash web sites. 
 Other geeks are very productive.  You push them into a corner and have them 
do research.  We owe it to them for many of the technological developments in 
computers, medicine, aerospace, smart bombs, missiles cruising up and down 
streets looking for addresses, etc.

I bought my 1959 TR-3 in 1962 for the sole purpose of joining clubs and 
participating in their activities of autocrosses, hill climbs, beer bashes -- 
you name it.  These efforts finally let to SCCA driver's school in 1964, and 
the following 35 years of working on the car and low level racing fun.  It is 
hard for me to picture a bunch of people scouring scrap yards, groveling in 
the grease, and tearing apart and putting together vintage cars as geeks or 
nerds.

I joined the Western Pennsylvania Triumph Club when I needed a source of 
engine blocks, transmissions, differentials, and other components when most 
of mine were destroyed.  This quest has been fulfilled beyond my wildest 
expectations.  Last night after a club meeting, there were three groups 
hanging around the beer barrel and planning get together's today for helping 
each other move junkers, tear bodies from this frame and moving them to other 
locations, welding, and other activities.  Club membership is the best method 
to support anyone's hobby.

I think I will attend another nerd activity tomorrow by meeting other club 
members at this bar with a big TV screen for the Daytona 500 party.

Bill Emery

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