I only know I applied for it in New York, and they said no and that most states don’t allow it, along with the usual assortment of swear words etc. I guess they get complaints.
And the 13th floor thing applies to cruise ships as well – a common joke to play on new cruisers is to describe some fabulous bar or restaurant on deck 13, which doesn’t exist.
Suspicious – most states don’t allow the “666” combination in either regular or vanity plates.
Shop?
According to an entry on Tumblr the car is a Holden Commodore in Australia.
“most states”…? Source?
Not that I don’t believe some states would prohibit this, but you could make a pretty good argument that the policy violates church/state separation.
Not using 666 means that DMVs don’t have to waste time on superstitious idiots refusing a specific license plate over and over.
Like that really stems the tide.
The point is moot since the plate seem to be from Australia, and I have no idea what their rules are
Well, like most Satanists, they do everything backwards 😀
That’s pretty odd, banning a number like that.
I wonder how widespread that is, and the 13th floor thing in hotels (it’s only in hotels, right?).
There is/was a route 666 that people have tried to get the name of changed for years. Don’t know if they succeeded.
U.S. Route 666 was renumbered in 2003 to U.S. Route 491. The reason stated was frequent sign theft.
I only know I applied for it in New York, and they said no and that most states don’t allow it, along with the usual assortment of swear words etc. I guess they get complaints.
And the 13th floor thing applies to cruise ships as well – a common joke to play on new cruisers is to describe some fabulous bar or restaurant on deck 13, which doesn’t exist.
Neat, I didn’t know it was a thing on cruise ships as well.
“Free Champagne cocktails and Broiled lobster tails – all day at the Nevertime Lounge on deck 13”
I thought “boyz in the hoodz”, believed\followed God’s will…