You know what @Donald_Petersen. I like you. You’re not like everyone else here in the BBS…
Yes he is!!!
Not enough PIFs
Unless it’s turned 90 degrees.
It’s even uglier with real blood and guts. Although the ones I’ve seen have been “lucky” enough to only trash a limb. The others went straight to the slab in the basement.
@LDoBe me, too
@Donald_Petersen me, too
two from the internet:
this is more of an existential type of warning
here’s some OC. I used to deliver food to the Rohm and Haas chemical plant in Knoxville. I remember they had one of those X number of days since this plant has had an accident
signs by the entrance. then I’d have to wait for the staff to meet me at the guard kiosk. this was laying on the ground in the parking lot one day. became a mantra for me.
it was intact when I found it, but I hung it a little too close to my stovetop at one point. sort of better that way, though.
You made the point! Yes, it’s funny!
You made the point!
But what if want please the touch? Even a lot? What if can’t help but please the touch, even when the heat? Is it dangerous? Thankyou.
Does the other side say YOURS?
Why don’t you step over there and see…
For some reason they won’t let me babysit anymore…
Too bad it was before the days of ubiquitous cameras… I spent a summer building a parking lot for tanks at Fort McCoy in WI - saw lots of interesting signs.
I’ve always liked the electrocution hazard signs where the electricity gets anthropomorphized.
(Big angry ball of electrocution gonna getcha.)
I can’t for the life of me figure out what languages the non-english scripts on that caution tape are.
At first I thought Hindi or Sanskrit, but realized they’re attached to a “bar” type dealie (yeah I’m a pro linguist, wanna fight?) and I’ve been looking through samples of different scripts and don’t see any that look like them.
I kinda want to know the possible backstories of the minefield. Minefields are so tragic. They’re the real gift of war that keeps on giving.
ETA:
It looks like the more “angular” script to the left of “MINES” could possibly be Khmer script.
Minefields are one of the most messed-up inventions humanity has come up with to date.
That said, depending on the region and who put up the caution tape I wouldn’t be too surprised if it read “DANGER! MINES” in one language and “PUBLIC PICNIC AREA” in another.