Posted on 07/01/2010 4:15:49 AM PDT by Artemis Webb
JUSTICE IS SWEET !!
Cell phones can be dangerous !!!
Heh. I was chatting on the phone in a traffic jam yesterday. Almost got in an accident because of it. Fishtailing as I stopped kind of situation. Cell phones are dangerous.
I am not sure how it’s justice that somebody was injured for minding their own business. How would using a cell phone at a noisy outdoor sporting event disturb anybody? The war against cell phones is just another collectivist travesty.
I did not watch the video so for all I know the phone user was assaulting somebody with the phone. In which case I apologize. Or if there is a no talking rule at that park.
I agree. Somehow it’s a crime against nature to talk on a cell phone but talking to the guy next to me is just being neighborly. I assume it’s a holdover of envy from back when only the rich had cell phones.
Obviously you know a lot more about "collectivist travesties" (Howard Cosell is that you? I thought you were dead.) than you do about baseball.
It’s not a crime. It’s just stupid. If you’re going to buy tickets on the front row near the foul line of an MLB stadium you need to be aware that a ball can come at you. Which in this case it did and the guy caught a ground rule double with his face. Could have been worse though, it could have been a line drive.
ping
Front row seats wasted on a “chatter” is the only crime I can surmise.
Ballpark tip: Don’t waste your money on tickets that get you close to the action unless you are prepared to be part of the action.
*This is a cellphone free area!*
I very highly doubt he paid for the tickets.
Just another reason why World Cup Soccer is better than baseball.
You can use your mobile all you want, and not get hit in the face with a baseball :-)
You type words but all I see is “Whine, whine, whine, whine”.
and.. (sniff, sniff)
he was...(choking sob)
just trying to talk to his friends...(heavy sob)
on his cell phone...(uncontrolled sobbing)
and this big mean baseball came out of nowhere...(racking sobs)
and hit him in his pretty face.
—all the best
July 1st, 2010
"It having been determined by my benefactor that a term of service at sea would make a man, I accordingly left Pinckley Hall in the company of Captain Ned, and put out from Bristol aboard his ship The Raging Queen.
Captain Ned, I learned from my shipmates, was a very manly, virile, manful person, and a firm believer in strict discipline, corporal punishment, and nude apartment wrestling. How truly strict he was, I learned on our first day out of port, when out First Mate called all hands on deck for an important annoucement."
[ dissolve onto scenes aboard The Raging Queen ]
[ First Mate Spunk rings the deck bell ]
First Mate Spunk: Alright, please, everybody, please! Welcome aboard The Raging Queen! Now, of course, I can't possibly introduce everybody, so you're just going to have to wear your little name tags. And if that's the worst thing you'll wear on this voyage, you're lucky. Now, before I introduce Captain Ned, there's some quiche over here, some salad, and some banana bread in the bowl, and there should be a brie around, if someone hasn't eaten it. And now, here is our own Captain Ned!
Really?
When I was teaching my kids to drive, one of the first things I suggested to them was to size up the drivers around them and to give people who obviously didn't belong on the road a wide berth. A driver who has a cell phone up to his ear is prima facie evidence that he doesn't know what he is doing. You're in favor of letting people drive and operated their phones at the same time?
And if I have the seat next to this schmuck (at Yankee Stadium) why should I be forced to listen to his phone conversation. The world isn't his phone booth. (And don't tell me that it's no different than if he were talking to the guy next to him. Everyone knows it isn't; and you know it too.)
And I guess you don't walk much in NYC. It's kind of comical to watch two cell phone walkers crash into each other, but it's more annoying to have to constantly dodge these people.
Cell phones have their place, but so does common courtesy and respect for the space of others.
ML/NJ
I am not sure how its justice that somebody was injured for minding their own business.Several reasons:
A person talking on a cell phone in public is rude. They are saying, by their behavior, that they do not have time for you or the world around them, because they are oh so busy and important, with other pressing matters to attend to.
They say, with their actions, that they are not part of the society they inhabit, but instead are somehow elevated above the ignorant masses that surround them.
Lastly, the idea of going to a baseball game only to call your friend is inane. The person has a responsibility to maintain awareness in that environment.
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