i agree
2007-10-19 02:19:22
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answer #1
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answered by blank 3
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You can legally drive temporarily in any state with any valid drivers license. If you are living there you have a certain period of time to get a license for the state you are living in. Moral to that story is don't drink and drive and you won't loose your driving privileges. Drivers licenses are a privilege not a right.
Ding your ignorance is showing read your constitution. No where in the Constitution addresses driving privileges. Kool Aid anyone?
2007-10-19 02:39:58
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I know your brighter than this...come on. You can drive anywhere in the US with any state license.....anywhere. When you reside in a new state you have to get the state license of where you reside...there is a time period for this.
Besides who cares about Britney Spears....she has more problems than a stupid drivers license.
2007-10-19 12:37:59
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answer #3
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answered by divers_godeeper 5
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If California is her home residence then it would be illegal to drive on another state's license. If Louisiana is her place of residence, then California has to accept a legal driver license from that state.
Most states require thirty days grace to change a license after moving to that state, then it becomes illegal.
If she lives in California and was driving on a Louisiana license that was a violation of her court order.
2007-10-19 02:24:56
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Maybe she has a valid LA license but her driving privileges are suspended in CA. I have a valid MO license but my TX license was suspended for a stupid surcharge that TX feels they are entitled to after someone pays off the ticket. So if I would have been caught driving in TX I would have gone to jail or at least court for driving on a suspended license even though I can drive anywhere else with my MO license
2007-10-19 02:22:47
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answer #5
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answered by caddyshacklifer 1
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Even here in Texas you have 10 days to change your license and give up your home state license . You must be a young driver ignorant of our laws
2007-10-19 02:25:23
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Wrong. After 30 days if she is a California resident she has to have California ID. In part that is because California ID is harder to get than some other state ID and we don't want people we can't hold accountable driving.
2007-10-19 03:49:48
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answer #7
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answered by DAR 7
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If you drive drunk in Pennsylvania with your Texas driving license, the court in Pennsylvania can suspend your driving privileges.
Not just in Pennsylvania. You lose your driving privileges in Texas, in California, in Louisiana, as well as the other 46 states.
That's in the U.S. Constitution.
Texas decided at one time that they didn't want to be part of the United States, and they seceded. Texans, on the other hand, are fools. They got their @$$es whupped at the Alamo by a bunch of underpaid, underfed, undertrained, illiterate Mexicans, and it wasn't even close. And when the United States fought against Texas, the texans got whupped soundly once again.
The reason why people in the world hate us is because we act like jerks. We acted like jerks when Lyndon was in office, and we act like jerks now that Dubya is in office. It's not just the rest of the world that hates what the US is doing. Most of the US hates what the US is doing.
It was a mistake to have ever let Texas have statehood again. Just a bunch of illiterates, mostly football players and whores, and fools that climb towers and start shooting people.
2007-10-19 02:27:37
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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In california you have to get a california license and license plate once you become a resident there. It's the law there as it is in many states.
2007-10-19 03:11:48
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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It is that way in many countries. However regarding Britney, considering her present state of mind at the moment I believe her license should be suspended until such times as she can prove herself responsible.
2007-10-19 02:22:36
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answer #10
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answered by holly 7
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If you lived in Texas and then MOVED to say, Kansas. You have a certain period of time (depends on the state) to get a license in the state that you reside in. Brittney thinks she's above all laws.
2007-10-19 02:19:04
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answer #11
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answered by joe s 6
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