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Man electrocuted while trying to steal booby trapped Trump sign (video included)
news965.com ^ | Samantha Jordan

Posted on 09/30/2016 3:13:46 AM PDT by RoosterRedux

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To: RoosterRedux

Another phony report by the lying old media. I’ve tested electric fences for cattle dozens of times just to make sure they were functioning. This is a funny story in that this criminal was thwarted.


61 posted on 09/30/2016 7:14:47 AM PDT by Neoliberalnot (Marxism works well only with the uneducated and the unarmed)
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To: RoosterRedux

How long until the homeowner is charged with reckless endangerment or something?


62 posted on 09/30/2016 7:18:20 AM PDT by GSWarrior
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To: Flavious_Maximus
The guy was pushing a stroller, probably as cover for his nefarious ways.

I have no doubt there was an infant child in the stroller, and the punk just left it there. Typical rat filth liberal.

63 posted on 09/30/2016 7:26:31 AM PDT by LouAvul (The most High ruleth in the kingdom of men, and giveth it to whomsoever he will.)
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To: RoosterRedux

Mr. Blue Sweatshirt is now Mr. Yellow Pants.

Glad he was charged with trespassing. Hope the back fence gossip spreads the word throughout the neighborhood.


64 posted on 09/30/2016 7:28:13 AM PDT by bgill (From the CDC site, "We don't know how people are infected with Ebola")
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To: polymuser
Ortho used to make (and still does I believe) a product called Orthene.

In the concentrated form that gets used in pump sprayers and the Ortho hose attached sprayer...it stinks to high heaven. Just opening the bottle is like opening Pandora's box. The odor will knock you off your feet.

I used to manage a hardware store. We used to sell Orthene. I opened a bottle once. It polluted the entire 2000 sq. ft. store. We had to open the doors and use fans to get rid of that smell.

Painting a Trump sign with it would keep Satan himself away from it.

65 posted on 09/30/2016 7:29:35 AM PDT by Bloody Sam Roberts (Don't question faith. Don't answer lies.)
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To: RoosterRedux

“Electrocuted” means you are dead. Someone in the editing room needs a remedial course in the English language.


66 posted on 09/30/2016 7:37:43 AM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (HANDGUNS; You don’t need it until you need it. And when you need it you NEED IT!”)
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To: God luvs America

Yes, there are even solar powered shockers available for the enviormentally concerned. I remember as a kid getting zapped by the fencing holding back the cows next door and it would knock you down. I had to install fencing for my Kids 4H Goats they were raising and found some fencers [as they are called] that were less powerful, so some zappers are more potent than others.


67 posted on 09/30/2016 9:20:55 AM PDT by ABN 505 (Right is right if nobody is right, and wrong is wrong if everybody is wrong. ~Archbishop Fulton John)
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To: smalltownslick

Two men were electrocuted, one critically.”


Reminds me of a safety speech I hear once that began, “Have any of you ever had a fatal accident?”


68 posted on 09/30/2016 9:26:11 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: RoosterRedux

There is a bunch of them at the end.


69 posted on 09/30/2016 9:30:31 AM PDT by US_MilitaryRules (The last suit you wear has no pockets!)
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To: Ken H

Electric Fence History. For those that don’t know, the pulse or click is the safety factor that allows one to let go of the fence. Note the reference to specific laws that might still be on the books................

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_fence

First published in 1832, Chapter 7 of Domestic Manners of the Americans by Fanny Trollope describes an arrangement of wires connected with an electrical machine used to protect a display called “Dorfeuille’s Hell” in the Western Museum of natural history in Cincinnati,[1] which she herself invented.[2]

Published in 1870, Chapter 22 of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, describes, “The Lightning Bolts of Captain Nemo” the use of electrification of a structure as a defensive weapon.

Published in 1889, Mark Twain’s novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, uses an electric fence for defensive purposes.

David H. Wilson obtained United States Patent 343,939 in 1886, combining protection, an alarm bell, and telephone communications. He constructed an experimental 30-mile electric fence energized by a water wheel in Texas in 1888, but it was not successful.[3]

In 1905, the Russian army improvised electric fences during the Russo-Japanese War at Port Arthur. In 1915, during World War I, the German army installed the “Wire of Death”, an electrified fences along the border between Belgium and the Netherlands [4] to prevent unauthorized movement of people across the border. The fences covered 300 kilometres and consisted of several strands of copper wire, backed with barbed wire, and energized to several thousand volts. An estimated 3,000 human fatalities were caused by the fence, as well as the destruction of livestock.
Electric fences were used to control livestock in the United States in the early 1930s, and electric fencing technology developed in both the United States and New Zealand.

An early application of the electric fence for livestock control was developed in 1936–1937 by New Zealand inventor Bill Gallagher. Built from a car ignition trembler coil set, Gallagher used the device to keep his horse from scratching itself against his car. Gallagher later started the Gallagher Group to improve and market the design.[5] In 1962, another New Zealand inventor, Doug Phillips, invented the non-shortable electric fence based on capacitor discharge.[6] This significantly increased the range an electric fence could be used from a few hundred metres to 35 km (~20 miles), and reduced the cost of fencing by more than 80%.[7] The non-shortable electric fence was patented by Phillips and by 1964 was manufactured by Plastic Products, a New Zealand firm, under the name “Waikato Electric Fence.”[7] This idea was to replace ceramic with plastic insulators. A variety of plastic insulators are now used on farms throughout the world today.

By 1939, public safety concerns in the United States prompted Underwriters’ Laboratories to publish a bulletin on electric shock from electric fences, leading to the ANSI/UL standard No. 69 for electric fence controllers.[8]
In 1969 Robert B. Cox, a farmer in Adams County, Iowa, invented an improved electric fence bracket and was issued United States Patent No. 3,516,643 on June 23, 1970. This bracket improved electric fences by keeping the wire high enough above the ground and far enough away from the fence to permit grass and weeds growing beneath the wire to be mowed. The brackets attached to the posts by what may be called a “pivot bind” or “torsion-lock.” The weight of the bracket, the attached insulator and the electric wire attached to the insulator bind the bracket to the post.
Electric fences have improved significantly over the years. Improvements include:

Polyethylene insulators replacing porcelain insulators, beginning in the 1960s. Polyethylene is much cheaper than porcelain and is less breakable.

Improvements in electrical design of the fence energizer, often called a “charger” (USA) or “fencer” (UK).
Changes in laws. In some jurisdictions, certain types of electrical outputs for fences were unlawful until the 1950s or 1960s.

In other areas, signage requirements and other restrictions limited usability. Many US cities continue to have outdated laws prohibiting electric fences to prevent agricultural fences from entering the city. Houston in Texas for example, changed their ordinance that prohibited electric fencing in 2008.[9]

Introduction of high tensile (HT) steel fence wire in the 1970s in New Zealand and in the 1980s in the United States.
Introduction of synthetic webbing and rope-like fencing materials woven with fine conducting wires.

Design of moveable fence components, such as Tumblewheel.


70 posted on 09/30/2016 9:40:43 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: NorthstarMom
'Fun" times when we were kids.

Years ago, a friend and I both capsized a canoe and it got away from us in a raging river. We climbed out of the river, dazed from the ordeal, and both grabbed the wires on an electric fence to try to squeeze between. Needless to say, we were good conductors and got fried. Long walk around the fence.

71 posted on 09/30/2016 1:15:22 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Kill TWITTER !! Kill FACEBOOK !! Free MILO !!)
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To: Twinkie

” Rubbing the sign
with the ivy might also work; “

Rubbing works, and they won’t know where they got the poison ivy. So no brick through your window at night! My neighbor’s kid had no idea how he got it!


72 posted on 09/30/2016 4:54:44 PM PDT by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra (Don't touch that thing Don't let anybody touch that thing!I'm a Doctor and I won't touch that thing!)
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