
Geld gevonden..
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:24
Ik heb vandaag een tien euro biljet gevonden in de supermarkt. Op de grond, het lag er gewoon.
Ik keek schichtig om me heen, pakte het op, deed alsof ik van niets wist en heb het in mijn zak gestoken. Vervolgens heb ik boodschappen gedaan en het voelde alsof ik tien euro korting had.
Nu voel ik wroeging; had ik het af moeten geven bij de klantenservice? Ben ik slecht?
Het is voor het eerst dat ik 'zoveel' geld heb gevonden. Ik zie heel soms wel eens een centje liggen, 10 (of als ik geluk heb) 20 cent.
Maar dit was een big deal
Hoe zit dat bij jullie?
Ik keek schichtig om me heen, pakte het op, deed alsof ik van niets wist en heb het in mijn zak gestoken. Vervolgens heb ik boodschappen gedaan en het voelde alsof ik tien euro korting had.
Nu voel ik wroeging; had ik het af moeten geven bij de klantenservice? Ben ik slecht?
Het is voor het eerst dat ik 'zoveel' geld heb gevonden. Ik zie heel soms wel eens een centje liggen, 10 (of als ik geluk heb) 20 cent.
Maar dit was een big deal
Hoe zit dat bij jullie?
I`ve learned so much from my mistakes.. I`m thinking of making a few more.

zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:26
Als ik zie dat iemand het laat vallen, geef ik het (uiteraard) terug. Als het gewoon op de grond ligt, geef ik het echt niet aan de winkel, zie ik het nut niet van in.
Over muntjes op straat vinden... Ik twijfel nog tussen twee houdingen, ben er nog niet uit:
Ik buk niet voor geld
of
Wie het kleine niet eert....
Over muntjes op straat vinden... Ik twijfel nog tussen twee houdingen, ben er nog niet uit:
Ik buk niet voor geld
of
Wie het kleine niet eert....
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:27



zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:30
Mijn moeder heeft een oog voor kleingeld. Het is niet normaal maar ze vind elke dag wel iets. Ze stopt het in een spaarpotje en elke paar maanden krijgen mijn twee kinderen zo ieder een tientje gestort van het vindpotje. Ze ziet dan ook werkelijk alles liggen, waar ik er met mijn neus opsta en het soms nog niet zie.
Als je niet kan aantonen van wie het geld is, zou ik het houden. Is het een portemonnee met naam en toenaam, zou ik het afgeven. Zou ik zelf ook erg fijn vinden als iemand anders dat voor mij doet.
Als je niet kan aantonen van wie het geld is, zou ik het houden. Is het een portemonnee met naam en toenaam, zou ik het afgeven. Zou ik zelf ook erg fijn vinden als iemand anders dat voor mij doet.
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:31
Ik hoorde net dat ze van de top 10 een top 11 gaan maken, je bent genomineerd.
Top 10 Most Evil Women world Record
We all tend to focus on the evil men in the world and forget some of the truly evil women that have lived. I hope to correct that with this list. Here we have not just serial killers, but other utterly despicable women who have caused tragedy in many people’s lives. So, without further ado, here are the top 10 most evil women in history.
10. Queen Mary I Born: 1516; Died: 1558
Mary was the only child of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon to live past infancy. Crowned after the death of Edward VI and the removal of The Nine Days Queen-Lady Jane Grey, Mary is chiefly remembered for temporarily and violently returning England to Catholicism. Many prominent Protestants were executed for their beliefs leading to the moniker “Bloody Mary”. Fearing the gallows a further 800 Protestants left the country, unable to return until her death. It should be noted that Elizabeth I shares position 10 on this list for her equally bad behavior.
9. Myra Hindley Born: 1942; Died: 2002
Myra Hindley and Ian Brady were responsible for the “Moors murders” occurring in the Manchester area of Britain in the mid 1960’s. Together these two monsters were responsible for the kidnapping, sexual abuse, torture and murder of three children under the age of twelve and two teenagers, aged 16 and 17. A key found in Myra’s possession led to incriminating evidence stored at a left-luggage depot at Manchester Central Station. The evidence included a tape recording of one of the murder victims screaming as Hindley and Brady raped and tortured her. In the final days before incarceration, she developed a swagger and arrogant attitude that became her trademark. Police secretary Sandra Wilkinson has never forgotten seeing Hindley and her mother Nellie, leaning against the courthouse eating sweets. While the mother was obviously and understandably upset, Hindley seemed indifferent and uncaring of her situation.
8. Isabella of Castile Born: 1451; Died: 1504
Isabella I of Spain, well known as the patron of Christopher Columbus, with her husband Ferdinand II of Aragon, are responsible for making possible the unification of Spain under their grandson Carlos I. As part of the drive for unification, Isabella appointed Tomás de Torquemada as the first Inquisitor General of the inquisition. March 31, 1492 marks the implementation of the Alhambra Decree; expulsion edicts forcing the removal or conversion of Jews and Muslims. Roughly 200,000 people left Spain; those remaining who chose conversion were subsequently persecuted by the inquisition investigating Judaizing conversos. In 1974, Pope Paul VI opened her cause for beatification. This places her on the path toward possible sainthood. In the Catholic Church, she is thus titled Servant of God.
7. Beverly Allitt Born: 1968
The “Angel of Death, Beverley Gail Allit, is one of Britain’s most well known serial killers. Working as a pediatric nurse, she is responsible for the murder of 4 children and the serious injury of 5 others in her care. When available, insulin or potassium injections were used to precipitate cardiac arrest; smothering sufficed when they were not. Although convicted with death or injury in nine cases, Allit attacked thirteen children over a fifty-eight day period before being caught red-handed. Allit has never spoken of the motive for her crimes, but Munchausen’s Syndrome by Proxy explains her actions. This debatable personality disorder involves a pattern of abuse or harm to someone in your care in order to garner attention (Alitt was known as a child to wear bandages and casts over wounds, but would not allow them to be examined).
6. Belle Gunness Born: 1859; Died: 1931
Belle Gunness was one of America’s most degenerate and productive female serial killers. Standing 6 ft (1.83 m) tall and weighing in at over 200 lbs (91 kg), she was an imposing and powerful woman of Norwegian descent. It is likely that she killed both her husbands and all of her children at different times, but it is certain that she murdered most of her suitors, boyfriends, and her two daughters, Myrtle and Lucy. The motive was greed-pure and simple; life insurance policies and assets stolen or swindled from her suitors became her source of income. Most reports put her death toll at more than twenty victims over several decades, with some claiming in excess of one hundred. Inconsistencies during her post mortem examination; the corpse was reported to be two inches shorter than Belle’s six feet, paved the way for Belle Gunnes to enter American criminal folklore, a female Bluebeard.
5. Mary Ann Cotton Born: 1832; Died: 1873
Englishwoman Mary Ann Cotton is another for-profit serial killer, predating Belle Gunnes by thirty years. Married at age twenty to William Mowbray, the newlyweds settled in Plymouth, Devon, to start their family. The couple had five children, four of whom died of ‘gastric fever and stomach pains’. Moving back to the north-east, tragedy seemed to follow them; three more children born, three more children died. William soon followed his offspring, dying of an ‘intestinal disorder’ in January 1865. British Prudential promptly paid a 35 pound dividend, and a pattern was established. Her second husband, George Ward, died of intestinal problems as well as one of her two remaining children. The power of the press, always a force to be reckoned with, caught up with Mary Ann. The local newspapers discovered that as Mary Ann moved around northern England, she lost three husbands, a lover, a friend, her mother and a dozen children, all dying of stomach fever. She was hanged at Durham County Gaol, March 24, 1873, for murder by arsenic poisoning. She died slowly, the hangman using too short a drop for a ‘clean’ execution.
4. Ilse Koch Born: 1906; Died: 1967
“Die Hexe von Buchenwald” the Witch of Buchenwald, or “Buchenwälder Schlampe” the Bitch of Buchenwald was the wife of Karl Koch, commandant of the concentration camps Buchenwald from 1937 to 1941, and Majdanek from 1941 to 1943. Drunk on the absolute power rendered by her husband, she reveled in torture and obscenity. Infamous for her souvenirs; tattoos taken from the murdered inmates, her reputation for debauchery was well earned. After building an indoor sports arena in 1940, with 250,000 marks stolen from inmates, Ilsa was promoted to Oberaufseherin or “chief overseer” of the few female guards at Buchenwald. She committed suicide by hanging herself at Aichach women’s prison on September 1, 1967.
3. Irma Grese Born: 1923; Died: 1945
Another product of the Nazi’s final solution, Irma Grese or the “Bitch of Belsen” was a guard at concentration camps Ravensbrück, Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. Transferred to Auschwitz in 1943, (she must have shown particular enthusiasm and dedication to the job), she was promoted to Senior Supervisor, the 2nd highest ranking female in camp, by the end of the year. In charge of over 30,000 Jewish female prisoners, she reveled in her work. Her work included; savaging of prisoners by her trained and half starved dogs, sexual excesses, arbitrary shootings, sadistic beatings with a plaited whip, and selecting prisoners for the gas chamber. She enjoyed both physical and emotional torture and habitually wore heavy boots and carried a pistol to facilitate both.
2. Katherine Knight Born: 1956
The first Australian woman to be sentenced to a natural life term without parole, Katherine Knight had a history of violence in relationships. She mashed the dentures of one of her ex-husbands and slashed the throat of another husband’s eight-week-old puppy before his eyes. A heated relationship with John Charles Thomas Price became public knowledge with an Apprehended Violence Order that Price had filed against Knight and ended with Knight stabbing Price to death with a butcher’s knife. He had been stabbed at least 37 times, both front and back, with many of the wounds penetrating vital organs. She then skinned him and hung his “suit” from the door frame in the living room, cut off his head and put it in the soup pot, baked his buttocks, and prepared gravy and vegetables to accompany the ‘roast’. The meal and a vindictive note were set out for the children, luckily discovered by police before they arrived home.
1. Elizabeth Bathory Born: 1560; Died: 1614
Countess Elizabeth Bathory is considered the most infamous serial killer in Hungarian/Slovak history. Rumors had circulated for years about missing peasant girls; offered well paid work at the castle, they were never seen again. One of these rumors reached the ears of King Mathias II, who sent a party of men to the massive Castle Csejthe. The men found one girl dead and one dying. Another was found wounded and others locked up. Described atrocities, collected from testimony of witnesses, include; severe beatings over extended periods of time, the use of needles, burning or mutilation of hands, sometimes also of faces and genitalia, biting the flesh off the faces, arms and other bodily parts, and the starving of victims. The victim total is thought to number in the hundreds occurring over a twenty-five year period. Due to her social status she was never brought to trial but remained under house arrest in a single room until her death. The idea that the Countess bathed in the blood of her victims is folklore, and one of the few things she did not do.
Top 10 Most Evil Women world Record
We all tend to focus on the evil men in the world and forget some of the truly evil women that have lived. I hope to correct that with this list. Here we have not just serial killers, but other utterly despicable women who have caused tragedy in many people’s lives. So, without further ado, here are the top 10 most evil women in history.
10. Queen Mary I Born: 1516; Died: 1558
Mary was the only child of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon to live past infancy. Crowned after the death of Edward VI and the removal of The Nine Days Queen-Lady Jane Grey, Mary is chiefly remembered for temporarily and violently returning England to Catholicism. Many prominent Protestants were executed for their beliefs leading to the moniker “Bloody Mary”. Fearing the gallows a further 800 Protestants left the country, unable to return until her death. It should be noted that Elizabeth I shares position 10 on this list for her equally bad behavior.
9. Myra Hindley Born: 1942; Died: 2002
Myra Hindley and Ian Brady were responsible for the “Moors murders” occurring in the Manchester area of Britain in the mid 1960’s. Together these two monsters were responsible for the kidnapping, sexual abuse, torture and murder of three children under the age of twelve and two teenagers, aged 16 and 17. A key found in Myra’s possession led to incriminating evidence stored at a left-luggage depot at Manchester Central Station. The evidence included a tape recording of one of the murder victims screaming as Hindley and Brady raped and tortured her. In the final days before incarceration, she developed a swagger and arrogant attitude that became her trademark. Police secretary Sandra Wilkinson has never forgotten seeing Hindley and her mother Nellie, leaning against the courthouse eating sweets. While the mother was obviously and understandably upset, Hindley seemed indifferent and uncaring of her situation.
8. Isabella of Castile Born: 1451; Died: 1504
Isabella I of Spain, well known as the patron of Christopher Columbus, with her husband Ferdinand II of Aragon, are responsible for making possible the unification of Spain under their grandson Carlos I. As part of the drive for unification, Isabella appointed Tomás de Torquemada as the first Inquisitor General of the inquisition. March 31, 1492 marks the implementation of the Alhambra Decree; expulsion edicts forcing the removal or conversion of Jews and Muslims. Roughly 200,000 people left Spain; those remaining who chose conversion were subsequently persecuted by the inquisition investigating Judaizing conversos. In 1974, Pope Paul VI opened her cause for beatification. This places her on the path toward possible sainthood. In the Catholic Church, she is thus titled Servant of God.
7. Beverly Allitt Born: 1968
The “Angel of Death, Beverley Gail Allit, is one of Britain’s most well known serial killers. Working as a pediatric nurse, she is responsible for the murder of 4 children and the serious injury of 5 others in her care. When available, insulin or potassium injections were used to precipitate cardiac arrest; smothering sufficed when they were not. Although convicted with death or injury in nine cases, Allit attacked thirteen children over a fifty-eight day period before being caught red-handed. Allit has never spoken of the motive for her crimes, but Munchausen’s Syndrome by Proxy explains her actions. This debatable personality disorder involves a pattern of abuse or harm to someone in your care in order to garner attention (Alitt was known as a child to wear bandages and casts over wounds, but would not allow them to be examined).
6. Belle Gunness Born: 1859; Died: 1931
Belle Gunness was one of America’s most degenerate and productive female serial killers. Standing 6 ft (1.83 m) tall and weighing in at over 200 lbs (91 kg), she was an imposing and powerful woman of Norwegian descent. It is likely that she killed both her husbands and all of her children at different times, but it is certain that she murdered most of her suitors, boyfriends, and her two daughters, Myrtle and Lucy. The motive was greed-pure and simple; life insurance policies and assets stolen or swindled from her suitors became her source of income. Most reports put her death toll at more than twenty victims over several decades, with some claiming in excess of one hundred. Inconsistencies during her post mortem examination; the corpse was reported to be two inches shorter than Belle’s six feet, paved the way for Belle Gunnes to enter American criminal folklore, a female Bluebeard.
5. Mary Ann Cotton Born: 1832; Died: 1873
Englishwoman Mary Ann Cotton is another for-profit serial killer, predating Belle Gunnes by thirty years. Married at age twenty to William Mowbray, the newlyweds settled in Plymouth, Devon, to start their family. The couple had five children, four of whom died of ‘gastric fever and stomach pains’. Moving back to the north-east, tragedy seemed to follow them; three more children born, three more children died. William soon followed his offspring, dying of an ‘intestinal disorder’ in January 1865. British Prudential promptly paid a 35 pound dividend, and a pattern was established. Her second husband, George Ward, died of intestinal problems as well as one of her two remaining children. The power of the press, always a force to be reckoned with, caught up with Mary Ann. The local newspapers discovered that as Mary Ann moved around northern England, she lost three husbands, a lover, a friend, her mother and a dozen children, all dying of stomach fever. She was hanged at Durham County Gaol, March 24, 1873, for murder by arsenic poisoning. She died slowly, the hangman using too short a drop for a ‘clean’ execution.
4. Ilse Koch Born: 1906; Died: 1967
“Die Hexe von Buchenwald” the Witch of Buchenwald, or “Buchenwälder Schlampe” the Bitch of Buchenwald was the wife of Karl Koch, commandant of the concentration camps Buchenwald from 1937 to 1941, and Majdanek from 1941 to 1943. Drunk on the absolute power rendered by her husband, she reveled in torture and obscenity. Infamous for her souvenirs; tattoos taken from the murdered inmates, her reputation for debauchery was well earned. After building an indoor sports arena in 1940, with 250,000 marks stolen from inmates, Ilsa was promoted to Oberaufseherin or “chief overseer” of the few female guards at Buchenwald. She committed suicide by hanging herself at Aichach women’s prison on September 1, 1967.
3. Irma Grese Born: 1923; Died: 1945
Another product of the Nazi’s final solution, Irma Grese or the “Bitch of Belsen” was a guard at concentration camps Ravensbrück, Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. Transferred to Auschwitz in 1943, (she must have shown particular enthusiasm and dedication to the job), she was promoted to Senior Supervisor, the 2nd highest ranking female in camp, by the end of the year. In charge of over 30,000 Jewish female prisoners, she reveled in her work. Her work included; savaging of prisoners by her trained and half starved dogs, sexual excesses, arbitrary shootings, sadistic beatings with a plaited whip, and selecting prisoners for the gas chamber. She enjoyed both physical and emotional torture and habitually wore heavy boots and carried a pistol to facilitate both.
2. Katherine Knight Born: 1956
The first Australian woman to be sentenced to a natural life term without parole, Katherine Knight had a history of violence in relationships. She mashed the dentures of one of her ex-husbands and slashed the throat of another husband’s eight-week-old puppy before his eyes. A heated relationship with John Charles Thomas Price became public knowledge with an Apprehended Violence Order that Price had filed against Knight and ended with Knight stabbing Price to death with a butcher’s knife. He had been stabbed at least 37 times, both front and back, with many of the wounds penetrating vital organs. She then skinned him and hung his “suit” from the door frame in the living room, cut off his head and put it in the soup pot, baked his buttocks, and prepared gravy and vegetables to accompany the ‘roast’. The meal and a vindictive note were set out for the children, luckily discovered by police before they arrived home.
1. Elizabeth Bathory Born: 1560; Died: 1614
Countess Elizabeth Bathory is considered the most infamous serial killer in Hungarian/Slovak history. Rumors had circulated for years about missing peasant girls; offered well paid work at the castle, they were never seen again. One of these rumors reached the ears of King Mathias II, who sent a party of men to the massive Castle Csejthe. The men found one girl dead and one dying. Another was found wounded and others locked up. Described atrocities, collected from testimony of witnesses, include; severe beatings over extended periods of time, the use of needles, burning or mutilation of hands, sometimes also of faces and genitalia, biting the flesh off the faces, arms and other bodily parts, and the starving of victims. The victim total is thought to number in the hundreds occurring over a twenty-five year period. Due to her social status she was never brought to trial but remained under house arrest in a single room until her death. The idea that the Countess bathed in the blood of her victims is folklore, and one of the few things she did not do.
Known to cause insanity in laboratory mice
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:37
Als ik 10 euro uit mijn broekzak zou laten vallen zou ik mezelf een sukkel vinden, maar geen haar op mijn hoofd die eraan zou denken om naar de klantenservice te gaan om te vragen of ze het gevonden zouden hebben.
Heb je wel wat extra lekkers voor jezelf gekocht? Als het mijn tientje was zou ik hopen dat je ervan zou genieten!
Heb je wel wat extra lekkers voor jezelf gekocht? Als het mijn tientje was zou ik hopen dat je ervan zou genieten!
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:40
quote:fleurtje schreef op 04 juli 2009 @ 23:26:
Over muntjes op straat vinden... Ik twijfel nog tussen twee houdingen, ben er nog niet uit:
Ik buk niet voor geld
of
Wie het kleine niet eert....
Wie het kleine niet eert. In midden Amerika maakte ik ook een keer die leuke opmerking 'ik buk niet voor geld' en dat viel niet in goede aarde. Waarom gvd niet?! Omdat arme mensen dat wel doen?! Voel je jezelf te goed ofzo?! Kijk je neer op armen?!
Sindsdien ga ik voor nummer twee.
Over muntjes op straat vinden... Ik twijfel nog tussen twee houdingen, ben er nog niet uit:
Ik buk niet voor geld
of
Wie het kleine niet eert....
Wie het kleine niet eert. In midden Amerika maakte ik ook een keer die leuke opmerking 'ik buk niet voor geld' en dat viel niet in goede aarde. Waarom gvd niet?! Omdat arme mensen dat wel doen?! Voel je jezelf te goed ofzo?! Kijk je neer op armen?!
Sindsdien ga ik voor nummer twee.
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:44

zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:46
Geld wat op de grond ligt en waarvan de afzender niet te traceren is (dus je ziet het niet vallen en er zit geen portemonnee met pasjes omheen) zou ik altijd zelf in m'n zak stoppen, bedrag maakt niet uit.
Inderdaad, al zou je het wegbrengen naar de klantenservice of het politibureau, kleine kans dat de oorspronkelijke eigenaar daar gaat informeren en wie stopt het dan in z'n zak? Juist ja, kun je het toch beter zelf in je zak stoppen dan er moeite voor doen zodat een ander het vervolgens in z'n zak kan stoppen.
Ik heb ooit een keer 20 Euro gevonden, zo los op de stoep, maar verder nooit wat. Daarnaast ben ik overigens een keer een portemonnee met 40 Euro cash en een hele lading passen kwijtgeraakt (zeer waarschijnlijk gerold) en die is nooit meer opgedoken.
Inderdaad, al zou je het wegbrengen naar de klantenservice of het politibureau, kleine kans dat de oorspronkelijke eigenaar daar gaat informeren en wie stopt het dan in z'n zak? Juist ja, kun je het toch beter zelf in je zak stoppen dan er moeite voor doen zodat een ander het vervolgens in z'n zak kan stoppen.
Ik heb ooit een keer 20 Euro gevonden, zo los op de stoep, maar verder nooit wat. Daarnaast ben ik overigens een keer een portemonnee met 40 Euro cash en een hele lading passen kwijtgeraakt (zeer waarschijnlijk gerold) en die is nooit meer opgedoken.

zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:50
Gewoon oppakken zou ik ook doen. Als jij het niet doet dan doet een ander het wel. En ik ben weleens geld verloren in de supermarkt en ben ook niet naar de klantenbalie gegaan. Had bedacht dat de vinder het zelf wel zou houden.
Idd, kun je herleiden van wie het is dan is het een ander verhaal.
Idd, kun je herleiden van wie het is dan is het een ander verhaal.
Ze bestaan, het is moeilijk te verstaan. Je wilt het niet horen, toch ben je samen met een geest geboren. In je zit een geest die leeft, die je soms moeilijkheden geeft. Eigenlijk is een geest heel fijn, anders zou je toch nooit geboren zijn?
zaterdag 4 juli 2009 om 23:51
Heb weleens 35 euro gevonden, zo los op de grond. Vond ik een financiële meevaller voor die dag. Ik heb geen moeite gedaan om te achterhalen van wie het afkomstig zou kunnen zijn. Als ik zag dat iemand het verloren was, dan had ik het aan de eigenaar gegeven.
Denken is zo buitengewoon moeilijk dat velen de voorkeur geven aan oordelen. Otto Weiss
zondag 5 juli 2009 om 00:08
Manlief had een keer 5 euro opgeraapt in het Ikea restaurant toen hij in de rij stond. Hij vroeg aan de man voor hem of het van hem was en toen dat niet zo bleek te zijn ging hij het afgeven bij de kassa (!). Ik dacht dat de ogen van die man uit zijn kassen vielen hahaha, hij verbaasde zich over zoveel eerlijkheid.

zondag 5 juli 2009 om 00:15
Bij de pinautomaat heb ik een keer een briefje van 50 euro gevonden op de grond. Niemand te bekennen in de wijde omgeving (was in woonwijk). Die heb ik toen maar in mijn zak gestoken en 50 euro extra overgemaakt op het gironummer voor de tsunami-slachtoffers destijds. Dat leek me wel een bestemming die ik kon verantwoorden zonder schuldgevoel.
zondag 5 juli 2009 om 00:18