Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 Marta let's just say Fouled(used instead of a famous curse word) up beyond all recognition. And yes I was referring to the Manzie case but I didn't know him. we all felt the lose though. My mother has told me that was the mob's burial ground. FUBAR Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 In a message dated 8/2/99 9:58:23 PM, lclott@... writes: << > Dabs- As sad as it is that is true. These monsters are getting younger every day and it terrifies me to let my kids out of my sight. >> My 23 yr old daughter was student teaching (post columbine) and an 8th grader she disciplined looked her right in the eyes and said " you bitch, I'll kill you for that " It was terrible. The kid, whose father happens to be a gun store owner, was expelled. you can imagine how terrified I was for her I also used to care for healthy 2 year olds and would ALWAYS check with local police re registered sex offenders. In conn you have to ASK if they are in your neighborhood. I believe in other states they automacally tell you. Kay, she is one of the 2 I sent the kiss to!!!! ( Always a mom) Dabs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 lol MARTA you're killing me Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 Anita, Boy that was a close call. I am glad your kid are doing ok... I know what you mean by the adrenaline.. It happened to me several times.. I would feel so sick then an emergency arose and all of a sudden, I found the energy.. Has this happened to others? elizabeth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 Kay, I agree that some of the urban legend sites are not all they should be, but the one I gave the URL to is excellent and very well researched. If you went there, you would see that they do not debunk every story, but do have some that are true, and they are listed as such. But they have citations going back 20 years or more for some of the stories that are being repeated as new, current, nationwide crime waves. I never said there isn't crime in the world -- I never said women and children don't have to be careful. We do. But we are *much* more likely to be killed in a car accident or in an accident in our homes, or to die of a heart attack or cancer, than we are to be abducted by an axe-murderer. That doesn't mean I go around with my doors unlocked, or don't take sensible precautions for my own safety, and I never let my daughter out of my sight. But we must keep these things in perspective. I never said there weren't child molesters, abductors of women, etc! I did say that *that particular post*, with *those particular stories* are urban legends which are directly cited at the Urban Legends site. They mentioned everyone of them specifically -- the " help my baby isn't breathing " one, the " mall pizza commercial " one... these are years and years old. Saying " women should be careful, because they can be harmed by psychos playing on their urge to be helpful " is a true statement. This is different than saying, " Women should be careful, because all over America they are being lured out of malls with promises of pizza commercials, pleas to help dying children, etc etc. " This is *not* a true statement. I am sorry if I've offended anyone, but I am inundated with these posts every week, warning about dioxin in my tampons, axe murderers in the backseat of my car, and devil worship at Proctor and Gamble. Most of these posts are laden with half-truths, misinformation, or outright lies, and they should be debunked when possible. As I said in my first post, I used to believe these stories at face value, and followed the instructions to " PASS THEM ON TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW!!!! " All I was doing was tying up valuable resources on the net, filling up people's mailboxes with junk. Before I pass anything on now, I apply the following test: 1. If it lists a police or government official, or some well-known organization as its source, I contact them via the Web or phone and find out if it's true. Most of the time I have gotten a recording that says, " If you're calling about the *name your horror story here*, we wish to inform you that there is no basis to the story. " Even the Disney organization has gotten back to me within the day when contacted this way. 2. I go to the Urban Legends website or newsgroup and do some quick research. They have heard them all before, and have citations, research and resources to back up which things are true and which are not. 3. I go on the Web and look for more information on the topic. Most of the " dire health warning " posts are full of scientific misinformation which can be easily debunked. Again, I'm sorry if I've offended anyone, and if I've drawn out this off-topic thread. But believing everything that comes your way over the Net is dangerous. Jean Kay wrote: > From: " Kay " <b10g7@...> > > >>>I used to be guilty of passing these things on > myself until I started reading this site. Some of > these stories have been around for 20 or more > years.<<< > > hi jean, > > sometimes these " sites " about urban legends etc. are actually not correct. > > i have seen news reports on this particular issue. > > lyme disease or not, i think it is always a good idea to be aware of who is > around you and what they are doing. > > is it also an " urban legend " that men will ask little kids to help him " find > his puppy " ? > > or is it a legend that men will lure kids with the promise of a new bike? > > here in boston about 18 months ago, a 10 year old boy, jeffrey curley, was > talked into getting into a car " for a new bike " (the assholes had stolen his > to make him extra vulnerable.). > > they smothered him with a gas filled rag and sodomized his dead body, put > him in a rubbermaid box, filled it with cement and threw it off a bridge in > maine. > > the mall abduction post is not about an " urban legend " , i saw a news show > that showed video tape from a mall of a woman being led out of the mall. > > also, they (the producers of the show) set up a " situation " to see how easy > it was to get people to go out to their van with them. i can't remember any > that wouldn't go, but it was a quite a long while ago, and my brain is not > what it once was. > > better " guilty " of passing an evil " urban legend " than to be guilty for > ignoring something that might educate someone to help keep them safer. > > hope, > kay > > --------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 Thanks , I get it now....guess I am not up to date on the current sayings, but that is a good one to describe Lyme disease and ignorant doctors too....FUBAR! I wonder if any of those tigers in caught Lyme disease or other tick diseases??? Hugs, Marta NJ - >From: y26778@... > >Marta let's just say Fouled(used instead of a famous curse word) up beyond >all recognition. And yes I was referring to the Manzie case but I didn't know >him. we all felt the lose though. My mother has told me that was the >mob's burial ground. FUBAR > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 In a message dated 8/3/99 2:22:59 PM, jeand@... writes: << I'm not but I can answer that question. I'm pretty sure it is an old military saying, made popular again by the movie Saving Private . It means ... F---ed Up Beyond All Recognition. You asked!! LOL! >> I absolutely LOVE it and will use it all the time!!!! My husb. who is also navy, albeit British royal, also knew it immediately (duh...what is wrong with me, I also have a military background...could it be LYME-BRAIN ??????? I think so ) thanks for the info xoxoDabs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 Good Lord, I hope not, I would hate for people with Lyme disease being compared to that sick child, he also was sexually abused by someone he met over the internet. I could not help but feel sorry for the parents, they both worked, and got a lot of the blame for his behavior, who knows what makes a kid turn bad, very sad case. Hugs, Marta NJ >From: BratDet@... > >In a message dated 8/3/99 4:40:04 AM Eastern Daylight Time, >mlmccoy@... writes: > ><< I bet you are referring to the Manzi case right? Wow, did you know him? > For those not aware, Manzi was a teen who was greatly troubled, his parents > tried to have him put away for psychiatric help but the Judge thought they > were just trying to get rid of him, he killed an 11 year old boy who was > selling candy or some other item for the school district. >> >I read somewhere he was previously treated for Lyme disease....makes on >wonder whether it was a matter of inadequate therapy...B > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 oh boy, joan that was scary.. the dogs shouldnt be running around loose ... shuddering.. glad your hubby is ok elizabeth md Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 >Hi , >I am going to show my age by finally asking you.........Wat does FUBAR mean >???? (lol) I'm not but I can answer that question. I'm pretty sure it is an old military saying, made popular again by the movie Saving Private . It means ... F---ed Up Beyond All Recognition. You asked!! LOL! Ann (TX) ex-Navy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 1999 Report Share Posted August 3, 1999 Hi , Yes, the adrenalin rush happened to me yesterday. My husband and I were in the pool when we heard dogs barking by our deck. My husband got out of the pool to see what the problem was, and then I heard him screaming at them! Knowing that he is a dog lover, I climbed out of the pool by using the ladder in the deep end (something that was hard to do before I got so weak) and RAN to see what was the matter. The dogs had tried to attack him, but luckily their owner showed up and took them home before he was injured. We were both amazed that I got over there so fast!!! Take Care, Joan LI, NY Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 1999 Report Share Posted August 4, 1999 Hi elizabeth, Yes, adrenaline kicks in sometimes when we need to fight or flee. But when you are finally able to relax......look out! Hugs, Marta NJ - >From: Shasus@... > >Anita, > >Boy that was a close call. I am glad your kid are doing ok... I know what you >mean by the adrenaline.. It happened to me several times.. I would feel so >sick then an emergency arose and all of a sudden, I found the energy.. Has >this happened to others? > >elizabeth > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 1999 Report Share Posted August 4, 1999 How do you pronounce it: Foo Bar, of Few Bar??? Have to get my curse words right, or I will lose credibility! Hugs, Marta NJ >From: Dabret22@... > > >In a message dated 8/3/99 2:22:59 PM, jeand@... writes: > ><< >I'm not but I can answer that question. I'm pretty sure it is an old >military saying, made popular again by the movie Saving Private . It >means ... F---ed Up Beyond All Recognition. You asked!! LOL! >> > >I absolutely LOVE it and will use it all the time!!!! My husb. who is also >navy, albeit British royal, also knew it immediately (duh...what is wrong >with me, I also have a military background...could it be LYME-BRAIN ??????? >I think so ) >thanks for the info xoxoDabs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 1999 Report Share Posted August 4, 1999 To me if people are spreading Urban legends it is scary...cause when a story starts up it gives criminals ideas...and then those urban legends aren't quite just urban legends anymore they will be cold true facts....Cyntha Landon Idaho PS you see this in the columbine insident....we have had some people copy catting the trench coat mafia here but have been caught....bomb scare in Rigby ....and then the kid who was sending around notes there and then school officials turned him in and found the trench coat in his bag and a gun and a note saying can't remember exactly of saluting and worsiping Hitler..that happened at Snake River High School..Even here in , My sister says one kids sabutaged the channed one (kids are required to watch it fifteen minutes a day in the morning filled with news...Why I don't Know just was all bad and depressing being a teenager I didn't need that they started it my sophomore year 1990)but he had replaced it with a documentary of Hitler..Pocatello second chance school being held hostage, no one killed thankgoodness *this happened of the other school shootings columbine hadn't happened yet*..and then the shooting in SLC, Utah at the LDS Geneological library....this scared me because I knew a lady who worked there but luckily wasn't working that day.....to me this is scary... .....So stories in my oponion are scary because ideas can stem from them...just a thought >From: Shasus@... >Reply-lyme-aidonelist >lyme-aidonelist >Subject: Re: [Lyme-aid] off topic, mall abduction warning >Date: Wed, 4 Aug 1999 11:41:35 EDT > >From: Shasus@... > > > >there is no offense. When I first read this story, I know it was an urban >legend story. I think that a lot of people need to be informed that a lot >of >scary stories circulating in the cyberworld may not be true. I fell >completely for that story about people getting injured by needles in the >change slot of the public phones. There may be some elements of truth to >the >stories, but seldom are. These stories persist because they strike a chord >of >fear within us. > >We don't need to be needlessly frightened by these urban legend stories, >but >we do need to remain viligant because, unfortunately, we do live in a >violent >society. Crimes occur so frequently nowadays that weren't common when I was >growing up. Kidnappings do occur in the shopping malls. Child abduction by >strangers do happen. Razors buried in halloween candies do surface. It >actually happened once in my hometown and the kid's tongue got badly >lacerated. It is sad that we have sick people who have nothing better to >do >than prey on innocent people. > >We just need to know which stories are just urban legend stories and which >one are legit. I usually let others know if I get an urban legend story >from >them that it s not true and refer them to this link. A lot of people meant >no >harm by passing these stories, but really thought they were helping others >by >warning them.. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 1999 Report Share Posted August 4, 1999 there is no offense. When I first read this story, I know it was an urban legend story. I think that a lot of people need to be informed that a lot of scary stories circulating in the cyberworld may not be true. I fell completely for that story about people getting injured by needles in the change slot of the public phones. There may be some elements of truth to the stories, but seldom are. These stories persist because they strike a chord of fear within us. We don't need to be needlessly frightened by these urban legend stories, but we do need to remain viligant because, unfortunately, we do live in a violent society. Crimes occur so frequently nowadays that weren't common when I was growing up. Kidnappings do occur in the shopping malls. Child abduction by strangers do happen. Razors buried in halloween candies do surface. It actually happened once in my hometown and the kid's tongue got badly lacerated. It is sad that we have sick people who have nothing better to do than prey on innocent people. We just need to know which stories are just urban legend stories and which one are legit. I usually let others know if I get an urban legend story from them that it s not true and refer them to this link. A lot of people meant no harm by passing these stories, but really thought they were helping others by warning them.. <A HREF= " http://urbanlegends.miningco.com/library/blhoax.htm " >Current Internet Hoaxes, urban legends, and o...</A> http://urbanlegends.miningco.com/library/blhoax.htm elizabeth md In a message dated 99-08-04 05:10:37 EDT, you write: << I agree that some of the urban legend sites are not all they should be, but the one I gave the URL to is excellent and very well researched. If you went there, you would see that they do not debunk every story, but do have some that are true, and they are listed as such. But they have citations going back 20 years or more for some of the stories that are being repeated as new, current, nationwide crime waves. I never said there isn't crime in the world -- I never said women and children don't have to be careful. We do. But we are *much* more likely to be killed in a car accident or in an accident in our homes, or to die of a heart attack or cancer, than we are to be abducted by an axe-murderer. That doesn't mean I go around with my doors unlocked, or don't take sensible precautions for my own safety, and I never let my daughter out of my sight. But we must keep these things in perspective. I never said there weren't child molesters, abductors of women, etc! I did say that *that particular post*, with *those particular stories* are urban legends which are directly cited at the Urban Legends site. They mentioned everyone of them specifically -- the " help my baby isn't breathing " one, the " mall pizza commercial " one... these are years and years old. Saying " women should be careful, because they can be harmed by psychos playing on their urge to be helpful " is a true statement. This is different than saying, " Women should be careful, because all over America they are being lured out of malls with promises of pizza commercials, pleas to help dying children, etc etc. " This is *not* a true statement. I am sorry if I've offended anyone, but I am inundated with these posts every week, warning about dioxin in my tampons, axe murderers in the backseat of my car, and devil worship at Proctor and Gamble. Most of these posts are laden with half-truths, misinformation, or outright lies, and they should be debunked when possible. As I said in my first post, I used to believe these stories at face value, and followed the instructions to " PASS THEM ON TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW!!!! " All I was doing was tying up valuable resources on the net, filling up people's mailboxes with junk. Before I pass anything on now, I apply the following test: 1. If it lists a police or government official, or some well-known organization as its source, I contact them via the Web or phone and find out if it's true. Most of the time I have gotten a recording that says, " If you're calling about the *name your horror story here*, we wish to inform you that there is no basis to the story. " Even the Disney organization has gotten back to me within the day when contacted this way. 2. I go to the Urban Legends website or newsgroup and do some quick research. They have heard them all before, and have citations, research and resources to back up which things are true and which are not. 3. I go on the Web and look for more information on the topic. Most of the " dire health warning " posts are full of scientific misinformation which can be easily debunked. Again, I'm sorry if I've offended anyone, and if I've drawn out this off-topic thread. But believing everything that comes your way over the Net is dangerous. Jean Kay wrote: > From: " Kay " <b10g7@...> > >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 1999 Report Share Posted August 4, 1999 In a message dated 8/4/99 10:42:17 AM Central Daylight Time, Shasus@... writes: << We just need to know which stories are just urban legend stories and which one are legit. I usually let others know if I get an urban legend story from them that it s not true and refer them to this link. A lot of people meant no harm by passing these stories, but really thought they were helping others by warning them. >> There is also a new book out called " The Culture of Fear " by Barry Glassner. It explores some of the things Americans are afraid of that really pose little threat. I have not read the book but I would assume urban myths would be discussed in this book at some point. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 1999 Report Share Posted August 4, 1999 Thanks for your reply on this. I used to believe these things too. Personally, I was really disappointed to find out that many tales that I had heard over the years were not true...like the choking doberman. [Woman comes home, finds pet doberman choking on something. Rushes it to the vet. Vet removes the foreign body, which turns out to be a man's fingers. Police rush to home and find would-be rapist/burglar/axemurderer/crazedhairy-armedpsychokiller in the closet, minus a couple of fingers.] I repeated that story for years as factual. Turns out it's such an old chestnut that it's actually the title of a book about urban legends. I think one thing about these stories that makes them spread is that they are dramatic, scary, and good fodder for conversation at parties and whatnot. Most of them involve a person escaping from the forces of evil by the skin of their teeth, or conversely not escaping due to their own good intentions. We can always see something to relate to -- either " That could have been me! Aren't I lucky to be alive! " or " I know better than that! Aren't I lucky to be smarter than that person! " Either way we get a cheap thrill. I love that snopes site, though. Barbara Mikkelson and her husband (I think? Can't remember) really put in a lot of time and effort to keep it interesting and up to date. There's also a newsgroup, alt.folklore.urban, but things can get pretty intense there. they have their own set of rules and newbies who break them are ruthlessly flamed. But lurking there is very interesting. They're a bunch of academics, mostly, and very entertaining. Sometimes I just *don't want to think or talk about Lyme anymore!* Jean Shasus@... wrote: > From: Shasus@... > > > > there is no offense. When I first read this story, I know it was an urban > legend story. I think that a lot of people need to be informed that a lot of > scary stories circulating in the cyberworld may not be true. I fell > completely for that story about people getting injured by needles in the > change slot of the public phones. There may be some elements of truth to the > stories, but seldom are. These stories persist because they strike a chord of > fear within us. > > We don't need to be needlessly frightened by these urban legend stories, but > we do need to remain viligant because, unfortunately, we do live in a violent > society. Crimes occur so frequently nowadays that weren't common when I was > growing up. Kidnappings do occur in the shopping malls. Child abduction by > strangers do happen. Razors buried in halloween candies do surface. It > actually happened once in my hometown and the kid's tongue got badly > lacerated. It is sad that we have sick people who have nothing better to do > than prey on innocent people. > > We just need to know which stories are just urban legend stories and which > one are legit. I usually let others know if I get an urban legend story from > them that it s not true and refer them to this link. A lot of people meant no > harm by passing these stories, but really thought they were helping others by > warning them.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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