Posted on 04/02/2017 8:30:30 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler
Do we have the answer yet?
Sure about that? Spent time in Okinawa and we drove left-hand side (so did almost everyone else).
I did not dispute your post.
Mountains are not high enough
saw somewhere after the place was ID’d its the coldest Capital on earth.
Yikes
Yes, you are correct, but being something of a car nut, I was thinking in terms of the cars, not the roads.
Cars in Japan, the UK, and many former British colonies are right hand drive and they are driven on the left. Cars in the US and most of the world are left hand drive and they are driven on the right.
Okinawa switched to RHD sometime in late 1976 or 1977.
At midnight one night. I was there. Quite interesting for a few days!
BTW, look at the ornate designs on the square building in the foreground. Looks Islamic to me.
I’d guess one of the “-stans”.
The absence of commercial signage says Pyongyang.
Japan is LHD and 100vac..
That's what I said. I think the other reply to me was his "right-hand drive" comment meant the steering wheel is on the right side of the car, which means you would drive on the left side of the road.
Took me a couple hours of driving around the base before I ventured out on public roads for the first time - very odd feeling.
Some of the answers given in this thread are so idiotic it doesnt seem like Free Republic.
You're right. It's almost what FreeRepublic used to be like.
When Freepers had a sense of humor.
It’s too upscale to be Bratislava.
“I was challenged to identify it and I knew where to find knowledgeable people.”
Still too many hold-overs at the CIA?
Trump: “Those guys sure went downhill in the last 8 years. Too much time spying on me I guess. So does anybody else know how we can figure out where this is?”
Pence: “Well I know a guy that knows a guy that is pretty bright - I’ll give him a call.”
Ten years or so ago when I had a blog on a site called Xanga, one of the other bloggers put up a very high res old photo of a city scene with a streetcar and labeled it as an old San Francisco scene. She wanted to know what decade it was from. I recognized the street in the picture and, generically, the tram, too and the buildings. It was a picture from sometime in the ten years after the War in Istanbul. I was a child there in the fifties and I remembered that particular street. I didn’t know the name of it, hell, I was less then 10 years old at the time, but I remember riding with my dad in his embassy provided jeep on that street with that particular curve on probably multiple occasions. I believe the pic was pre 1955 because one of those buildings collapsed in an earthquake in that year- it was a small tremor but most of those multistory buildings, the newer ones, at least, had no steel in the concrete, no rebar.
We don’t get many Ulan Bator threads here on FR. That said there is a Canadian tv series called Don’t Drive Here which goes to various places around the world with um difficult traffic conditions and explores them and how to negotiate your way around. They did one for Ulan Bator. Tons of vehicles since the USSR collapsed but the roads are less than adequate.
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