Some Deeper meaning stories
“The ones that don’t question the rules end up making rules.”
Begin forwarded message:
The Good news:
It was a normal day in Sharon Springs, Kansas, when a Union Pacific crew boarded a loaded coal train for the long trek to Salina.
The Bad news:
Just a few miles into the trip a wheel bearing became overheated and melted, letting a metal support drop down and grind on the rail, creating white hot molten metal droppings spewing down to the rail.The Good news:
A very alert crew noticed smoke about halfway back in the train and immediately stopped the train in compliance with the Governmental Regulations.The Bad news:
The train stopped with the hot wheel over a wooden bridge with creosote ties and trusses. When the crew tried to explain to higher-ups they needed to move the train, they were instructed not to move the train because Federal Regulations prohibit moving the train when a part is defective.The pictures tell the rest…. As always, the Government knows what is best for us!
REMEMBER, RULES ARE RULES!
Don’t ever let common sense get in the way of a Government Regulation.
It’s always a scary day when the government is in charge!
Und sie sitzen auch bei uns wieder am Werk: in Bern an der Sommersession!
Reminds me of when I was younger. I was asked in school and elsewhere for that matter that great rhetorical question:
“Just who do you think you are to question the rules???”
The ones that don’t question the rules end up making rules like this.
‘With what money?’ demanded his parents. They knew what a Chevrolet Avalanche cost.
‘Well,’ said the boy, ‘this one cost me just fifteen dollars.’
‘It was the lady up the street,’ said the boy. I don’t know her name -they just moved in. She saw me ride past on my bike and asked me if I wanted to buy a Chevrolet Avalanche for fifteen dollars.’
‘Oh my Goodness!,’ moaned the mother, ‘she must be a child abuser. Who knows what she will do next? John, you go right up there and see what’s going on.’
‘Well,’ she said, ‘this morning I got a phone call from my husband. (I thought he was on a business trip, but learned from a friend he had run off to Hawaii with his mistress and really doesn’t intend to come back).
He claimed he was stranded and needed cash, and asked me to sell his new Chevrolet Avalanche and send him the money.
So I did.’
(Are women good or what?)
Homographs are words of like spelling but with more than one meaning. A homograph that is also pronounced differently is a heteronym.
You think English is easy??
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An Interesting History of 1752 – Here is an interesting historical fact that you probably didn’t know… (I sure didn’t). Just have a look at the calendar for the month of September 1752….. In case you haven’t noticed, 11 days are simply missing from the month.
Here’s the explanation: This was the month during which England shifted from the Roman Julian Calendar to the Gregorian Calendar.
A Julian year was 11 days longer than a Gregorian year. So, the King of England ordered 11 days to be wiped off the face of that particular month (A King could order anything, couldn’t he?).
So, the workers worked for 11 days less that month, but got paid for the whole month. That’s how the concept of “paid leave” was born. Hail the King!!!
In the Roman Julian Calendar, April used to be the first month of the year; but the Gregorian Calendar observed January as the first month. Even after shifting to the Gregorian Calendar, many people refused to give up old traditions and continued celebrating 1st April as the New Year’s Day. When simple orders didn’t work, the King finally issued a royal dictum; which stated that those who celebrated 1st April as the new year’s day would be labelled as fools. From then on, 1st April became April Fool’s Day.
History is really interesting, isn’t it ?