Vanity plates are a great way for car owners to express themselves. Because these people pay extra to get a special message or a grouping of letters and numbers onto their license plate, these vanity plates allow people to get creative and come up with some unique expressions. But sometimes the state governments and their departments of motor vehicles do not approve of controversial language and have to reject a vanity plate application.

But Wendy Auger recently learned that her vanity plate of fifteen years was being rejected all because it contained the “pe*” word on the plate. Her vanity plate was a funny one, which read, “PB4WEGO” and got a lot of people to smile while she was driving along the highways and remote roads of New Hampshire where she lives. Auger works as a bartender from the Gonic neighborhood in Rochester, New Hampshire, so she was shocked that the DMV felt this was so offensive.

Auger believes that the state is trying to stomp on her first amendment right to free speech. Not only that, but she feels that the phrase “pe* before we go” is hardly a bad phrase to display on the vanity plate because it is common-sense advice that every parent will give to their children.

Auger had not gotten the plate on a whim. She had hunted it down for years and was waiting for it to finally become available. When it was suddenly open, she jumped on the chance to put “PB4WEGO” on her New Hampshire plate. That was because the state expanded the number of characters allowed in its vanity license plates from six to seven.

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