Originally posted by RichardCranium
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Reply to: Peer Pressure
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Previously on "Peer Pressure"
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Originally posted by RichardCranium View PostSorry.
I felt obliged by the recurring trend for people to deliberately misinterpret thread titles and make puns from them. I suppose I was pressured by the convention of my peers into doing the same.
So...
Baaaaaaa!
heh heh
how did the job reqts thingy go yesterday
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Postand you can button it. You never see me wrecking peoples threads by making smart @rsed comments
I felt obliged to do so by the trend for people to deliberately misinterpret thread titles and make puns from them. I suppose I was pressured by the convention of my peers into doing the same.
So...
Baaaaaaa!
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Originally posted by RichardCranium View PostBugger.
I had just been composing a clever post about Brighton, Southend-on-Sea, Weston-super-Mare and the Victorian invention of going to the seaside and its impact upon fishermen's and ferries' jetties.
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Originally posted by k2p2 View PostMaybe that is the case. However, in other countries it pretty common. South Africa is a good example - in many communities nearly everyone does it. I visited last year, and was truly shocked at just how drunk people would get before getting behind the wheel. Probably if you were to go and live there now, you would continue to oppose drink driving. But if you had always lived there, your parents probably would have done it, all your friends would have been doing it, what are the chances of your logical opposition ever having kicked in?
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostLogic makes me opposed to drink driving, not peer pressure.
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Originally posted by Billy-Bob View PostSorry I thought Sorry I thought you meant Peir Pressure.
I had just been composing a clever post about Brighton, Southend-on-Sea, Weston-super-Mare and the Victorian invention of going to the seaside and its impact upon fishermen's and ferries' jetties.
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Sand pile driving work is by use of the sand pile driving apparatus. By the operation of the vibrator, the casing pipe is penetrated into a ground to a predetermined depth. Then, while reciprocating the piston cylinder mechanism, sand is discharged from the lower end of the casing pipe and the discharged sand is compacted. At the same time, a pull out procedure to pull out the casing pipe to a predetermined length is performed. By this pull out procedure, sand is filled into a space within the ground which is made after the casing pipe is pulled out. Sorry I thought Sorry I thought you meant Peir Pressure.
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Originally posted by Unwitting Catalyst View PostVery impressed so far - understated and credible, and streets ahead of the normal Linda LaPlante/means streets of South London/"get out you slaaag" dross served up as "ITV Drama"
You're only saying that cos everyone else is. Think for yourself man.
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Anyone watching "Collision"?
Very impressed so far - understated and credible, and streets ahead of the normal Linda LaPlante/means streets of South London/"get out you slaaag" dross served up as "ITV Drama"
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View PostAha. There we have it.
According to some of the posters on here, anyone who opposes drink driving is a sheep
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Originally posted by k2p2 View PostWe sometimes get both strangers and neighbours collecting for this or that at the door. I deal with them all the same way - ask them to leave details of the charity and I will decide whether to send a donation direct. Many of them are 'chuggers' - paid a commission to collect at the door, so donating direct also ensures more of the money goes to the charity. I was quite shocked by one charity raffle ticket costing £2 - the teeny teeny print said that 14p would end up in the charity's pocket!
But that's digressing...
Peer pressure can be good or bad.
The decrease in drink driving for example, since the 1980s, is largely due to its social unacceptability, which is surely another form of peer pressure.
According to some of the posters on here, anyone who opposes drink driving is a sheep
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We sometimes get both strangers and neighbours collecting for this or that at the door. I deal with them all the same way - ask them to leave details of the charity and I will decide whether to send a donation direct. Many of them are 'chuggers' - paid a commission to collect at the door, so donating direct also ensures more of the money goes to the charity. I was quite shocked by one charity raffle ticket costing £2 - the teeny teeny print said that 14p would end up in the charity's pocket!
But that's digressing...
Peer pressure can be good or bad.
The decrease in drink driving for example, since the 1980s, is largely due to its social unacceptability, which is surely another form of peer pressure.
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Originally posted by Tarquin Farquhar View PostRemind them of Matthew chapter 6:
There's a lot of nonsense in the bible, but there are some nuggets of real wisdom too.
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostThat is done in a quite ugly way in Holland. Charity collectors knock on doors to ask for money; the people who knock on the door are people from your own village or neighbourhood, so they know you. Sometimes they even ask you to write your name on a list with how much money you've given.
Take heed that ye do not your alms before men, to be seen of them: otherwise ye have no reward of your Father which is in heaven.
Therefore when thou doest thine alms, do not sound a trumpet before thee, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may have glory of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.
But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth:
That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly.
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