I've been on every interstate highway in the lower forty-eight states by now, and I never get tired of the view.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I've seen every highway in the United States, and they all look alike to me.
Sometimes when I get home at night in Washington I feel as though I had been in a great traffic jam.
I have some road rage inside of me. Traffic, especially in L.A., is a pet peeve of mine.
Sometimes, it takes leaving to gain some perspective. I see that clearly every time I leave Washington, D.C., and return to Indiana. I see the bizarre bubble that seems to enclose the Beltway and makes people forget what regular people care about.
My least favorite thing about New York is probably the traffic. I hate it. The people are such aggressive drivers here, they're horrible.
Shoot, after you've been through freeway traffic in Houston or Dallas, there's no road in the world that can scare you. Besides, we're pretty much used to driving long distances in Texas.
I love driving my car on any highway.
Interstate highways dull the reality of place and distance almost as effectively as jetliners do: I loathe their scary monotony.
Thanks to the Interstate Highway System, it is now possible to travel across the country from coast to coast without seeing anything.
The freeways of America are like giant veins twisting and turning, rushing life from one zone to the next. The landscape is a giant body just lying there feeling the rumble.