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harry 20-01-2012 06:51 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0

McKevvy 20-01-2012 08:41 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Jan 20, 6:51*pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.

They don't get my sympathy.

McK.

Mel Rowing 20-01-2012 08:46 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Jan 20, 8:41*pm, McKevvy wrote:
On Jan 20, 6:51*pm, harry wrote:

Not for the faint hearted this one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.

They don't get my sympathy.


Nor mine either! It makes one more sympathetic towards Shariah Law.
The Mullahs would chop their bloody hands off. There'd only be need to
do it once!



Jeff Layman[_2_] 20-01-2012 08:51 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Maybe British Rail should make copies of the photos and put them at
regular intervals along their tracks.

--

Jeff

Nigel Oldfield 20-01-2012 10:04 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Gotta sting.

WM

TMC[_2_] 20-01-2012 10:15 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 

"harry" wrote in message
...
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Would not want to clear that up


No Name 20-01-2012 10:30 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In uk.rec.gardening harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


That's quite impressively messy. Took a while to work out what I was
looking at when I could only see the first picture.

The horrid thing is, I can now picture what my dad encountered the time he
was driving a train on track where a child had been playing and was caught
by the third rail. He was off work quite a while after that. Kind of
wishing I hadn't thought of that just before bed.

[email protected] 21-01-2012 12:29 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Fri, 20 Jan 2012 10:51:46 -0800 (PST), harry
wrote:

Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Stupid *******s. Nice to see the Nikes survived, though.

Andrew Gabriel 21-01-2012 12:37 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In article ,
harry writes:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


ogrish.com used to have lots of these pictures (most very much worse)
but the hostname was bought by someone else a few years ago who just
switched it to point at their own site, and as far as I know, it was
all lost.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

Christina Websell 21-01-2012 03:35 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 

"McKevvy" wrote in message
...
On Jan 20, 6:51 pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this
one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.

They don't get my sympathy.

--------

Nor mine, if was greed, but a whole different ballgame if they needed the
money to eat.






Michael Bell 21-01-2012 06:34 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In message
ups.com
harry wrote:

Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


This looks fake to me.

Michael Bell
--

Larry Stoter[_2_] 21-01-2012 07:21 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
Mel Rowing wrote:

On Jan 20, 8:41 pm, McKevvy wrote:
On Jan 20, 6:51 pm, harry wrote:

Not for the faint hearted this
one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.

They don't get my sympathy.


Nor mine either! It makes one more sympathetic towards Shariah Law.
The Mullahs would chop their bloody hands off. There'd only be need to
do it once!


.... who also imprison women who have been raped while the male offender
is let go ...

Larry

mogga 21-01-2012 01:14 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 00:37:10 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:

In article ,
harry writes:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0

ogrish.com used to have lots of these pictures (most very much worse)
but the hostname was bought by someone else a few years ago who just
switched it to point at their own site, and as far as I know, it was
all lost.


http://wayback.archive.org/web/*/http://ogrish.com
That any use?
--
http://www.voucherfreebies.co.uk

David in Normandy[_8_] 21-01-2012 05:23 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 20/01/2012 23:04, Nigel Oldfield wrote:
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Gotta sting.



Bet it came as a shock.

--
David in Normandy.
To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the
subject line, or it will be automatically deleted
by a filter and not reach my inbox.

'Mike'[_4_] 21-01-2012 05:31 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 


"David in Normandy" wrote in message
r...
On 20/01/2012 23:04, Nigel Oldfield wrote:
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Gotta sting.



Bet it came as a shock.

--
David in Normandy.
To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the
subject line, or it will be automatically deleted
by a filter and not reach my inbox.



An electrifying experience?

Mike


--

....................................

I'm an Angel, honest ! The horns are there just to keep the halo straight.

....................................






kay 21-01-2012 06:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael Bell (Post 947696)

Agreed. I did a bit of googling - couldn't find any references to in the newspapers, which I'm sure would have covered it had it been genuine (1). Early manifestations had it ascribed to the west Indies rather than Jamaica. And one of the sources was on a particularly nasty site with a particularly horrible but fake picture whose details I won't go into.

(1) I did find one newspaper report of a death by electrocution of a metal thief but it was not this case and the chap was not quite that incinerated. And the guy was named.

Steve O 21-01-2012 09:23 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.

Ian Jackson 21-01-2012 09:49 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.
--
Ian

Bob Eager[_2_] 21-01-2012 10:11 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 21:49:46 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote:

In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.


See the "Ambridge" thread!

--
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK:
http://www.mirrorservice.org

*lightning protection* - a w_tom conductor

Ian Jackson 21-01-2012 10:22 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In message , Bob Eager
writes
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 21:49:46 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote:

In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.


See the "Ambridge" thread!

It's not in uk.d-i-y and legal.uk, so presumably it's in
uk.rec.gardening.
--
Ian

Andrew Gabriel 21-01-2012 10:26 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In article ,
Steve O writes:
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head


Remains of their hats

and the fire spread,


Extent of the plasma arc path across the surface of the ground - a
self-sustaining fire is unlikely

it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.


They will have stood back and watched, until assured by the electric
company that the power was off, and attendance at site of electric
company personel to test it really is off.

I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


They never do, in case someone is offended.
You could say the same for car/motorbike crashes, etc.
It would probably help significantly if teenagers understood
how fragile their bodies are by actually seeing what happens
to bodies in a crash before they were allowed to control a
vehicle on the road, but that would be politically unacceptable,
so they are let loose at a time in their lives where they are
under a complete misapprehension of being indestructable.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

Steve O 21-01-2012 10:29 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 21/01/2012 21:49, Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the
emergency services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images
in a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by Friday.



\I have noticed a lot more power cuts than usual lately, and have been
wondering if it due to cable theft

Bob Eager[_2_] 21-01-2012 10:34 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 22:22:24 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote:

In message , Bob Eager
writes
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 21:49:46 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote:

In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the
emergency services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images
in a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.

Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result,
for several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.


See the "Ambridge" thread!

It's not in uk.d-i-y and legal.uk, so presumably it's in
uk.rec.gardening.


Sorry! Got my groups mixed up. It's in uk.telecom....



--
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK:
http://www.mirrorservice.org

*lightning protection* - a w_tom conductor

Andrew Gabriel 21-01-2012 10:58 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In article ,
McKevvy writes:
On Jan 20, 6:51*pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0

Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.
They don't get my sympathy.


I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions, but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate. So in the sense that
they didn't get a chance to serve their sentence and didn't get a
chance to go on to become reformed upright citizens, I do feel
sorry for them. Of course, I have no way of knowing if they would
have taken that chance even if it had been made available to them,
or if they would have continued to be a blight on society, or if
they've been a blight on society for some time before this.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

polygonum 21-01-2012 11:14 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 22:58:17 -0000, Andrew Gabriel
wrote:

In article
,
McKevvy writes:
On Jan 20, 6:51 pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this
one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0

Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.
They don't get my sympathy.


I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions, but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate. So in the sense that
they didn't get a chance to serve their sentence and didn't get a
chance to go on to become reformed upright citizens, I do feel
sorry for them. Of course, I have no way of knowing if they would
have taken that chance even if it had been made available to them,
or if they would have continued to be a blight on society, or if
they've been a blight on society for some time before this.


I am certainly not going to flat out disagree with your humane view. But I
do think that people who do things like this completely ignore the danger
they pose to the rest of us by their actions. The safety systems that
fail. The operations that are interrupted or deferred - and the
consequences of that.

--
Rod

polygonum 21-01-2012 11:27 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 23:17:03 -0000, Tim Streater
wrote:

In article ,
polygonum wrote:

I am certainly not going to flat out disagree with your humane view.
But I do think that people who do things like this completely ignore
the danger they pose to the rest of us by their actions.


I doubt if they ignore them. I doubt if such issues ever enter their
minds.

Probably right in many cases.

--
Rod

Frank Erskine 21-01-2012 11:45 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 22:58:17 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:

In article ,
McKevvy writes:
On Jan 20, 6:51*pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0
Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.
They don't get my sympathy.


I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions, but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate. So in the sense that
they didn't get a chance to serve their sentence and didn't get a
chance to go on to become reformed upright citizens, I do feel
sorry for them.


But their "death sentence" is self-imposed, not dished out by a court.
Numerous warning signs tell them of the dangers surrounding
electricity poles/pylons, substations and railways.

I'm afraid that I don't subscribe to the view that once you've served
a sentence you're as clean as the man next door, which effectively
"commercialises" crime by giving it a specific "price" as punishment.

--
Frank Erskine

[email protected] 22-01-2012 02:06 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 21:49:46 +0000, Ian Jackson
wrote:

Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.


breathes sigh of relief
I was on my chair edge there.

polygonum 22-01-2012 08:18 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 21:49:46 -0000, Ian Jackson
wrote:

In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.


How did they broadcast the midweek episodes without power?

--
Rod

PeterC[_2_] 22-01-2012 08:30 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 23:45:35 +0000, Frank Erskine wrote:

On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 22:58:17 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:

In article ,
McKevvy writes:
On Jan 20, 6:51*pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0
Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.
They don't get my sympathy.


I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions, but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate. So in the sense that
they didn't get a chance to serve their sentence and didn't get a
chance to go on to become reformed upright citizens, I do feel
sorry for them.


But their "death sentence" is self-imposed, not dished out by a court.
Numerous warning signs tell them of the dangers surrounding
electricity poles/pylons, substations and railways.

I'm afraid that I don't subscribe to the view that once you've served
a sentence you're as clean as the man next door, which effectively
"commercialises" crime by giving it a specific "price" as punishment.


It's cheaper for us than keeping them in prison.
--
Peter.
The gods will stay away
whilst religions hold sway

David in Normandy[_8_] 22-01-2012 08:51 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 22/01/2012 00:17, Tim Streater wrote:
In article ,
polygonum wrote:

I am certainly not going to flat out disagree with your humane view.
But I do think that people who do things like this completely ignore
the danger they pose to the rest of us by their actions.


I doubt if they ignore them. I doubt if such issues ever enter their minds.


They probably weren't bright sparks.

--
David in Normandy.
To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the
subject line, or it will be automatically deleted
by a filter and not reach my inbox.

kay 22-01-2012 09:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Frank Erskine (Post 947799)

I'm afraid that I don't subscribe to the view that once you've served
a sentence you're as clean as the man next door, which effectively
"commercialises" crime by giving it a specific "price" as punishment.

But how can you do otherwise? Have a lottery where one day a shoplifter might get a life sentence, and the next day a serial murderer gets a £50 fine? The whole idea of making the punishment commensurate to the crime does put a price (or at least a price range) on it.

But I think you were perhaps referring to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act whereby after a period your crime may be "spent" and you no longer have to declare it on job applications. It takes a time for your crime to be "spent" and many ever are.

If someone who does something stupid when they're young (and a third of young men born in 1953 acquired a conviction (not including motoring offences) by the age of 30) finds they are barred from legal means of earning a living, people may feel that it's their own fault, but it leaves them with only illegal ways of acquiring money, and that's bad news for all of us. The tricky thing is getting the balance between protecting society by letting everyone know who has committed a crime, and protecting society by giving people a chance to put it behind them and become a productive member of society.

The Medway Handyman[_3_] 22-01-2012 10:21 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On 21/01/2012 22:26, Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In ,
Steve writes:
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0



Judging by the dried foam on his head


Remains of their hats

and the fire spread,


Extent of the plasma arc path across the surface of the ground - a
self-sustaining fire is unlikely

it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.


They will have stood back and watched, until assured by the electric
company that the power was off, and attendance at site of electric
company personel to test it really is off.

I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


They never do, in case someone is offended.
You could say the same for car/motorbike crashes, etc.
It would probably help significantly if teenagers understood
how fragile their bodies are by actually seeing what happens
to bodies in a crash before they were allowed to control a
vehicle on the road, but that would be politically unacceptable,
so they are let loose at a time in their lives where they are
under a complete misapprehension of being indestructable.

Every Xmas time around here the local police/fire brigade place terribly
smashed up cars on the roundabouts along with suitable 'don't drink &
drive' posters.



--
Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk

Mike Tomlinson 22-01-2012 10:55 AM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
En el artículo , Frank
Erskine escribió:

But their "death sentence" is self-imposed, not dished out by a court.
Numerous warning signs tell them of the dangers surrounding
electricity poles/pylons, substations and railways.


Agreed. Darwin in action.

--
(\_/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")

Phi 22-01-2012 01:00 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 

"polygonum" wrote in message
. net...
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 21:49:46 -0000, Ian Jackson
wrote:

In message , Steve O
writes
On 20/01/2012 18:51, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0


Judging by the dried foam on his head and the fire spread, it looks as
if these two were still alight or smouldering nicely when the emergency
services arrived.
I think it would be useful for police to consider using these images in
a warning campaign to deter metal thieves.


Even the inhabitants of Ambridge have had problems with cable thieves.
This very week, most of the village lost its broadband and telephone
connections after "200 meters" of cable was purloined. As a result, for
several days, many were temporarily reduced to a Stone Age way of
living. However, I believe that normal service had been restored by
Friday.




Were they Amp meters or Volt meters ?


joe 22-01-2012 02:45 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
Frank Erskine wrote:

On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 22:58:17 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:

In article
,
McKevvy writes:
On Jan 20, 6:51*pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this

one!
http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0 Yup.
This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago. They don't get my
sympathy.

I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions, but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate. So in the sense that
they didn't get a chance to serve their sentence and didn't get a
chance to go on to become reformed upright citizens, I do feel
sorry for them.


But their "death sentence" is self-imposed, not dished out by a court.
Numerous warning signs tell them of the dangers surrounding
electricity poles/pylons, substations and railways.


But were the signs in 20 different languages, judging by their colour,
they might not have been able to read the signs.



ARWadsworth 22-01-2012 04:08 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article
,
McKevvy writes:
On Jan 20, 6:51 pm, harry wrote:
Not for the faint hearted this
one!http://www.thegaragegazette.com/index.php?topic=8130.0

Yup. This was posted in uk.railway a few days ago.
They don't get my sympathy.


I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions,



but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate.


So you have never met a Daily Mail reader then?


--
Adam



charles 22-01-2012 06:33 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
In article ,
Tim Streater wrote:

[Snip]

I was wondering that myself:


Meter: device for measuring something e.g. volts
Met foreign unit of length


in my school days (1950s), the Meter was a unit of length, too. We changed
to the French spelling later - perhaps to make it easier for us to join the
EEC? or was it when Concord became Concorde?

--
From KT24

Using a RISC OS computer running v5.16


The Grey Man 22-01-2012 06:57 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2012 22:58:17 +0000 (UTC),
(Andrew Gabriel) wrote:

I know it's difficult to sympathise with someone cut down by their
own criminal actions, but it's not a crime for which anyone is going
to suggest a death sentence is appropriate. So in the sense that
they didn't get a chance to serve their sentence and didn't get a
chance to go on to become reformed upright citizens, I do feel
sorry for them.


Are you for real?

'Mike'[_4_] 22-01-2012 07:22 PM

Metal theft. The biters bit
 


"charles" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Tim Streater wrote:

[Snip]

I was wondering that myself:


Meter: device for measuring something e.g. volts
Met foreign unit of length


in my school days (1950s), the Meter was a unit of length, too. We
changed
to the French spelling later - perhaps to make it easier for us to join
the
EEC? or was it when Concord became Concorde?

--
From KT24

Using a RISC OS computer running v5.16


WRONG

I went to school in the 40's and the 50's. The Meter was the thing which
measured the Gas or Electric used. (Some took the Penny or the Shilling) The
Metre was the unit of measure.

Mike

--

....................................

I'm an Angel, honest ! The horns are there just to keep the halo straight.

....................................







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