Man Tries to Rob a Bank with a Drawing of a Gun


(Image: Warner Bros., "Hare Trigger.")

Radio Poland reports that on August 11, a British man walked into a bank in Warsaw with a drawing of a gun. He presented it to a teller. Then he showed her a second sheet of paper on which was written in broken Polish a demand for money. It said:

“This is a robbery I have a gun give me all the money.”

The woman calmly told the man to wait at the back of the queue, and the Briton duly obliged.

In the meantime, the cashier called the police and the would be assailant was arrested shortly thereafter.

-via Nothing to Do with Aborath


Comments (2)

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The human thirst for knowledge only extends to a length inversely proportionate to his/her will to ignorance, which generally extends a lot further. The Will to Ignorance is more palatable than the Will to Knowledge because of it's social value.
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I somewhat agree Ryan, but I think it depends on whether or not a person places value on knowledge above other equally as valuable things, like love or money. I think his point was that if you're curious for knowledge, the best way to live and learn is to admit lack of knowledge. You approach changing truths and discover new knowledge more fervently than if you thought you "knew," particularly if you come from the viewpoint that science in its entirety is not proven and everything is completely theoretical, which might be where his commitments to "lack of purpose" and truth came from. Vaclav Havel said something relevant: "Keep the company of those who seek the truth--run from those who have found it." Therefore, to admit ignorance is knowledge. I think Feynman probably could care less about whether or not he was socially palatable, especially considering his public disdain for the social workings of the National Academy of Sciences. Sorry if I'm being a little abstract here. You brought up a good point to think about.
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I liked his line about one little aspect of God coming to Earth and look what it’s created…. Like our views of God are the surface views of the flower and to expand beyond that (the flower to all its aspects vs. the Earth compared to the complexity of the universe)

In one stroke he doubts God, but then expands the beauty of God to the universe… and states that our beliefs are as limiting to Gods true beauty as limiting our understanding of the flower to only its surface “one centimeter”

There’s a helluva lot in that one little video…
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