Subject: BS: Baby on board From: Dave Hanson Date: 24 Jul 09 - 03:44 AM I keep seeing this sign in the rear windows of cars, WHY ? what is the point ? does it mean, if I see you without the sign it's OK to run into you ? beats me Dave H |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Backwoodsman Date: 24 Jul 09 - 03:49 AM Have you noticed it's those twerps with the 'BOB' signs that are always in the overtaking lane on the Motorways doing about 120 mph? Apparently it's OK for them to risk their brats' necks, but not you or I. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Abdul The Bul Bul Date: 24 Jul 09 - 03:55 AM It really means" excuse my erratic and unpredictable driving, I'm trying to reach the tissues in the glove compartment to wipe off the puke on the cellphone I need to use". Al |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Backwoodsman Date: 24 Jul 09 - 04:02 AM "I'm trying to reach the tissues in the glove compartment to wipe off the puke on the cellphone I need to use". Ah yes! I 'd forgotten that they're usually quacking twenty-to-the-dozen on their mobiles as they make their somewhat-less-than-stately-progress along The Queen's Highway (despite it being illegal and very dangerous). Presumably they think that the 'BOB' sign will save them from prosecution or an accident? |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Michael Date: 24 Jul 09 - 04:02 AM Translation:- "I'm hard,me, I got a bird, shagged her AND my sperm worked. And what's more I almost learnt to drive". Mike |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 24 Jul 09 - 04:48 AM I read somewhere that the original sign was created after a baby was thrown clear from a bad crash & rescuers didn't realise it had been in the car & therefore didn't look for it. Reads like an urban legend (no baby bag stuffed with baby necessities? no toys?) so I looked in snopes & found the story was false! - the sign was designed as a safety measure sandra |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: GUEST,Chris B (Born Again Scouser) Date: 24 Jul 09 - 04:54 AM I find them annoying as well and I'm a parent. However, I was told a while ago by a paramedic that if they come to a traffic accident and the car has one of the stickers they'll look for the child first. If it's a bad accident and the car is crumpled up that means they'll potentially spend a lot of time and effort looking for the child before seeing to the driver. The moral of the story is if you aren't actually carrying a child, take the sticker out. My approach to my child's safety while driving is rather different. I drive properly. Seems to have worked so far. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: kendall Date: 24 Jul 09 - 05:49 AM A friend of mine bought a new motor home; tens of thousands of dollars. He came up behind a trailer that had a sign, CAUTION, HORSES. He ignored it until the two horses decided to pee at the same time and his rig got a bath. Hot radiator, hot engine, it stunk for a month in spite of frequent cleanings. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Jeanie Date: 24 Jul 09 - 05:56 AM Here's something that really annoys me (Caution: "Grumpy Old Woman alert"): These same baby-on-board people are often to be found parked, with their road-side door wide open, either taking their child out of the rear car seat or putting the child back in. The door is often very wide, too - the vehicle generally being a 4x4. Incredibly dangerous, apart from being totally inconsiderate to the traffic which is unable to pass them. WHY don't they open the door on the pavement side and lean across ? Is it that difficult ? I guess they are so selfish that they think that if they did it from the pavement side, they would actually hear the people walking on the pavement saying "Excuse me", and they would have to pull their door in to let them pass. By having the door open on the road side they can pretend to be oblivous to the delays they are causing. Or are they just oblivious to others in general ? - jeanie |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 24 Jul 09 - 06:54 AM I always assume such signs are an attempt to remind other drivers with the kinds of attitudes revealed in some of the posts in this thread that cars contain very vulnerable people and that driving is a serious business requiring tolerance and patience of other road users. Maybe it would be better to have a sign in the back saying "vicious homicidal maniac on board" to put the fear of God into smug people in a hurry. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Leadfingers Date: 24 Jul 09 - 07:33 AM I imagine most of you will remember the flags that used to be flown on (Especially) white vans - These were 'I'm a Crap Driver' signs , but fell out of favour when it was pointed out that they increased wind resistance and interfered with fuel economy . The solution was a sign inside the car , and these came in two styles ! The 'Baby on Board' and the 'Prebooked Private Hire' stickers . |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Jeanie Date: 24 Jul 09 - 07:41 AM McGrath - in case your comment is directed at me: Surely a person loading/unloading a child from the ROAD TRAFFIC side is making themselves and their child far more vulnerable than if they were doing this from the pavement side ? The smugness (if there is any) is not on the part of the other road users who are trying to go about their unhurried business safely, but on the part of the parent who smugly thinks that the world revolves around them and that it is fine for them to hold up everybody else, when there is a much safer and more considerate way of loading/unloading their child. - jeanie |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Catherine Jayne Date: 24 Jul 09 - 08:28 AM We don't have any bob stickers in either of the cars. We drive sensibly but I can see the reason why people put them in their cars. My friend has a baby on board sign and a mum to be on board sign and I've just heard she's bought a twins on board sign to go in when she gives birth later this year!...over the top possibly but most people see them as fashion accessories. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: SINSULL Date: 24 Jul 09 - 08:41 AM The signs were designed to alert police and firefighters in case of an emergency. We have them on the windows of children's bedrooms here as well so that firefighters know where to look. Animal rescue organizations provide them so that emergency workers know to look for a dog or cat in case of a fire or whatever. Makes sense to me. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: artbrooks Date: 25 Jul 09 - 11:54 AM Hey, Kendall....why was your friend driving so close that his rig got sprayed? I can (almost) see the utility of one of those signs - except for the fact that they block vision out of the rear window when one is trying to check the next lane for a lane change. Of course, the ones who (1) have sign(s) and (2) are talking on their telephones probably don't look when they change lanes anyway - without benefit of turn signals, of course. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Paul Burke Date: 25 Jul 09 - 12:08 PM I thought the "baby" the sign referred to was the driver. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: robomatic Date: 25 Jul 09 - 12:43 PM I remember the first time I saw one of these on the inside rear window of a posh sedan going through an intersection on the Embarcadero near 280 in Palo Alto. BOB doesn't do it justice. It had an exclamation point! It said to me: "Because I 'may' have a baby in my car, I'm more important!" The rash of little yellow signs with "Mother-In-Law" and "Baby Elephant" On Board that followed showed me that Americans have a sense of humor, irony, and "way to make a buck". It leveled the playing field for the less importantcy folk. Now, twenty-five years later, I maintain my ironic detachment. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: olddude Date: 25 Jul 09 - 12:46 PM I prefer the sticker, "12 Gauge Shotgun on board" people drive much better and don't tailgate |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: VirginiaTam Date: 25 Jul 09 - 12:47 PM Have also seen the Small Person On Board signs and have a real desire to get some "Small Minded Git On Board" stickers printed up, with especially paint destructive glue. Especially for the numbnuts who park their range rovers right up against our little Seat Arosa so that we can't get into it. Remembering the "I brake for dogs, cats, bingo etc." signs. There should be an "I Brake For No Apparent Reason" sticker. I also want a big flashing digital sign that runs across top of our windscreen that can be programmed to say various things like God is my co-pilot and he says "Thou Shalt Alternate Merge!" I saw you toss litter from your car the other day and I told your Mum! Dear cyclist, the highway code applies to you too! |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Emma B Date: 25 Jul 09 - 12:53 PM A most extraordinary case is being heard in the High Court at the moment, in which a motorist is making history by being prosecuted privately for the stickers in his car window. Here is an extract from yesterday's proceedings. Counsel: Your name is Sidney Greenleaf ? Witness: It is. Counsel: Do you or do you not own a car ? Witness: I do. It is not a crime to own a car. Counsel: Nobody is suggesting that it is a crime, Mr Greenstreet. Witness: Greenleaf. Counsel: Greenleaf. Now, Mr Greenleaf, could you describe this car to us? Witness: Yes, I could. PAUSE Counsel: Why are you not describing this car for us ? Witness: Nobody has asked me to. All you have asked so far is whether I would be capable of it. I said that I would be capable of it. Counsel: Describe this car, please. Witness: Well, it's dirty but basically in quite good nick, apart from a small rattle in the engine which I can't trace. The windscreen spray is out of alignment, which means that passers-by tend to get more of the spray than the car does, know what I mean ... Counsel: When I asked you to describe the car, I did not mean give me a sales talk. I meant, tell me the make and colour. Witness: Oh. It's a four-wheel green Mazda. Judge: Excuse me for butting in again so soon, but I though that Asda was a large shop. Counsel: No, my Lord, his car is called a Mazda, not Asda. Judge: I thought that a Mazda was a kind of lightbulb. Counsel: And so it is, my Lord. But it is also a kind of car. Judge: How curious. Is it not odd that a lightbulb manufacturer should suddenly take it into his head to manufacture family cars? Counsel: Most odd, my Lord. Now, Mr Greenleaf ... Judge: Has Osram started making cars? Counsel: I don't think so, my Lord. Judge: Is it an electric car? Counsel: Is what an electric car? Judge: This car made by the lightbulb people. The Mazda. Counsel: His Lordship wants to know if your car is electric. Witness: It's petrol-driven, my Lord. Of course, the lights are electric. If your Lordship is interested in buying it, I could give him a run round during the recess or lunch break or whatever it's called. It's in pretty good condition and it's recently been valeted ... Counsel: I do not think he is interested in your car as a possible purchase, only as part of the trial. Witness: Fair enough. Counsel: Now, could you describe your car back window. Witness: Yes, I think I could do that. PAUSE. Oh, sorry, you mean you actually want me to describe my back window? Counsel: Yes, I do. With special reference to the sticker or stickers in that window. Witness: Righty ho. Well, the window itself is a plain glass window. The first sticker is an old one we've had for ages, which just says: "Keep Back - Baby on Board." The second one says: "Windsurfers Do It Standing Up." There's one other, which says ... Counsel: Do you actually have a baby on board? Witness: Pardon? Counsel: Your car sticker proclaims to the whole world that you have a baby in the car. Is this in fact true? Witness: Well, no, not really. It was true when we put the sticker in. Counsel: How long ago was that? Witness: 1979. Counsel: How old is the baby now? Witness: Rising 18. She's just off to college. Counsel: So the car sticker is now wholly misleading ... Judge: Excuse me for butting in again, but will someone tell me what this is all about? Counsel: My Lord, I represent the Council for Decent and Truthful Car Stickers, a body of good people and true who have decided to take a stand against mendacious and misleading car stickers. We aim to prove that Mr and Mrs Greenleaf have been lying about babies for the past 15years simply in order to have more room on the road. Judge: I see. Are you going to bring every motorist in Britain with this sticker in here this morning? Counsel: No, my Lord. We hope that this will be a test case. Judge: Thank goodness for that. Incidentally, what do windsurfers do standing up ? I have often wondered. Counsel: That will probably become clear, my Lord, when we call a windsurfer as a witness. Judge: Good! I shall look forward to that. More of this fascinating case tomorrow, I hope. Miles Kington 13 May 1941 – 30 January 2008) British journalist, musician (a double bass player for Instant Sunshine and other groups) and broadcaster |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: katlaughing Date: 25 Jul 09 - 01:28 PM LOL, Emma. This looks like another stereotype thread at Mudcat, though. McGrath and Sins, I agree. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: robomatic Date: 25 Jul 09 - 02:25 PM bloody hilarious emma! |
Subject: RE: BS: Infant Upon A Two By Four From: Severn Date: 25 Jul 09 - 04:09 PM The phrase Baby On Board actually started at sea, where when infants misbehaved (or like the boards themselves, were knotty), they made them crawl the plank. They never made them stop the practice completely, but laws were passed that they had to put up the signs, the equivalent back then of the results of one of Obama's safety reform bills after having gone through Congress. The boards in question were fashioned by way of infant trees, though adult trees were occaisionally known to enter into the process. No truth to the rumor that in The Cannibal Isles it was a delicacy prepared much in the same way as planked salmon. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: robomatic Date: 25 Jul 09 - 06:52 PM This thread should be moved above the line, courtesy of "THE SIMPSONS" Baby on board How I've adored That sign on my car's windowpane. Bounce in my step, Loaded with pep, 'Cause I'm drivin' in the carpool lane. Call me a square, Friend I don't care, 'Cause that little yellow sign can't be ignored. I'm telling you it's mighty nice. Each trip's a trip to paridise With my baby on board. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Peace Date: 25 Jul 09 - 09:46 PM It's a stupid sign. Planked salmon I can understand, but BABY ON BOARD ? How friggin' sick is THAT! |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on the board meeting From: Severn Date: 25 Jul 09 - 09:53 PM Unless you're raised by the Flathead Indians, Bruce. Then It's par for the course and part of your upbringing. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: kendall Date: 26 Jul 09 - 09:46 AM My friend had to be following too close. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 26 Jul 09 - 10:44 AM Jeanie asked/commented: WHY don't they open the door on the pavement side and lean across ? Is it that difficult ? I think you need to go back to when the driver and offspring got on board. It's convenient and natural enough to approach from the driver's side, place the brat in the back seat, then move aside just a step or so to the driver's door to assume the wheel. When mommy (or daddy; got to be PC here) parks, of course Junior needs to be retrieved from that same side, which in parallel parking is going to be the traffic side of the car. Leaning across the width of the car to reclaim the sprat is a pain in the neck. Q.E.D. Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: VirginiaTam Date: 26 Jul 09 - 10:54 AM BABY ON BOARD - how sick is that? Ask Jonathan Swift or read A Modest Proposal. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Bat Goddess Date: 26 Jul 09 - 12:37 PM It really means" excuse my erratic and unpredictable driving, I'm trying to reach the tissues in the glove compartment to wipe off the puke on the cellphone I need to use". Yeah, and "I'm more important than you are" -- and always on an SUV. Always in a yellow traffic-sign-like diamond suction-cupped to the back windshield. Haven't seen many lately (except a few aging ones) -- the fad around here was mid-1990s. Then came the parodies, including "Mother-in-law in Trunk" (boot, for you Brits). And I've actually seen bumper stickers that say "I Brake For No Apparent Reason". (The one I should have on my car is "I Brake for Yardsales" -- and I have one, not on my car because I don't want to lose it, that says "I Brake For Old Cemeteries" courtesy of Maine Old Cemeteries Association, which I should rejoin.) Linn Linn |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Peace Date: 26 Jul 09 - 12:46 PM Someone mentioned that signs of that nature help first responders at the scene of car crashes, etc. Actually, they don't, because we ALWAYS search for other occupants both in and around the vehicle. I have attended two MVCs in which the sign was there, the driver unconscious, and no baby to be found. So, we searched, searched and searched s'more. Both times the baby wasn't ON BOARD. And hadn't been that day. The sign was there, though. It's like PETS LIVE HERE signs on doors. One fire we searched, but later in talking with the house owner the pet had died years before. He still had the sign. If you have a child(ren) on board, drive carefully. I think people with that sign would be seriously miffed were I to report the vehicle to police if I didn't see a baby on board while the sign was bobbing around. "Uh, 911 (999 in the UK), I'd like to report a missing baby . . .". Anyway, I hate the damned things. The signs, not the kids. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: kendall Date: 26 Jul 09 - 12:47 PM HONK IF YOU HATE NOISE |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Peace Date: 26 Jul 09 - 12:53 PM LOL |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: ClaireBear Date: 26 Jul 09 - 01:22 PM Linn and VTam, I've seen "...no apparent reason" too. But even closer to my heart (and sure to get this thread moved up above the line, being a musical reference and all, was another one I saw once: "I brake just like a little girl." Claire |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 26 Jul 09 - 02:21 PM I suppose if we go round looking for some harmless idiosyncrasy to get hot under the collar about, we'll always be able to find something... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: meself Date: 26 Jul 09 - 05:22 PM It really makes me mad when someone ends a sentence with an ellipsis. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 26 Jul 09 - 05:31 PM Dud: What do the three dots mean, Pete? Pete: Well in Shute's hands, three dots can mean anything. Dud: How's your father, perhaps? Pete: It usually means a bit of that, but Shute always uses three dots. It means "Use your own imagination", that's what it means. "Conjure the scene up yourself". Whenever I see dots, I feel all funny... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Richard Bridge Date: 26 Jul 09 - 05:37 PM Are those like elliptical billiard balls? It annoys me when people say "mad" when they mean "annoyed". Mental illness is not funny. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Richard Bridge Date: 26 Jul 09 - 05:39 PM Can I get sticker that says "I don't brake unless I have to. Acceleration is another matter"? |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: meself Date: 26 Jul 09 - 05:47 PM I Do Not Brake For Pedants. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 26 Jul 09 - 07:34 PM Actually, I can't think when I last SAW one of those "Baby on Board" notices. A long time ago, I know. Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board(Ellipsis sweeter than whine) From: Severn Date: 26 Jul 09 - 07:35 PM I'm talking to meself, here, but.... I'm not sure if I knew it was an ellipsis that I'd have ever started doing it until you gave us mere ellipses service to the fact. Too late to stop now I guess...... I just go through these extended ellipsis periods from time to time. Now about those tots topping timber............ |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: meself Date: 26 Jul 09 - 08:02 PM I'm really getting mad now ... not to say, annoyed .... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 26 Jul 09 - 08:05 PM ... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Peace Date: 26 Jul 09 - 08:06 PM . . . and I agree . . . . |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Dave Hanson Date: 27 Jul 09 - 02:29 AM ...---... Dave H |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: GUEST,Chris B (Born Again Scouser) Date: 27 Jul 09 - 04:39 AM Referring back to an earlier post, people who are loading or unloading children from their cars are usually doing outside their homes (or someone else's) in residential streets or outside schools or childcare establishments. In either case, other road users who are driving down those roads should be driving slowly anyway. If I see a parent loading or unloading a child I wait until they are finished and then pass by. Nothing I am doing is so urgent that it justifies bullying a parent or distressing their child. If you're in such a hurry stick to the main roads in the mornings and afternoons and don't go tearing past my house or my child's school at 40 miles per hour. Dave Osterreich, if you've got the guts, come round my house and call my child a brat. Then see what happens. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: kendall Date: 27 Jul 09 - 07:02 AM meself, we need more pedants in our schools. The kids today can't even find America on a globe.Their command of the language is pathetic. On the tv program, 60 minutes, Scott Pelly was talking about poisoned Lions in Africa, and he said ..they performed an autopsy. WRONG An autopsy is only performed on humans. If it's an animal it's called a necropsy. The dumbing down of America is fed by people who should know better. How many narrators say "Artic, or antartic"? Even Judge Alex doesn't know the difference between take and bring. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Richard Bridge Date: 27 Jul 09 - 07:51 AM Hear, hear. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: TheSnail Date: 27 Jul 09 - 09:43 AM Never mind "Baby on Board", what about "Valuable Show Dogs on Board"? No mere human child; not a smelly but much loved pet mutt but "Valuable Show Dogs"! What are they saying, "Back off or I'll set the Rottweillers on you"? Our local pub is advertising Award winning sausages, I'm thinking of getting an "Award Winning Sausages on Board" sign made up. (I wonder where they stick the rosette.) |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: meself Date: 27 Jul 09 - 10:25 AM Here's the trouble with pedantry, at least as it pertains to language: when I was in grade 5, I was taught deliberately and distinctly by one of those old-school pedants that the word "Arctic" is pronounced "Artic" - the "c", I was told, is silent, as the "t" in "often"; if I were to hear you say, "ArKtic", I would think to myself, "Poor fellow, he must have been home with galloping consumption that day", as you, hearing my pronunciation of the same word, might think, "This backwoods buffoon would do better to restrict himself to utterance of the unisyllabic mode." Which one of us has the "correct" pronunciation? Someday I may get around to blowing the dust off certain weighty tomes in an obscure corner of my bookshelf to discover what the ancients have to say on the matter; until then, I will go on assuming that MY teachers were always right, and everyone else's teachers were, sadly and all-too-humanly, fallible. I don't think there is a week that goes by on this very forum that someone doesn't attempt to correct the English of another poster by citing some wrongheaded, archaic, and thoroughly discredited "rule" that was dunned into their head when they were young and impressionable. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: artbrooks Date: 27 Jul 09 - 12:44 PM Webster's says both pronunciations are acceptable, as do Merriam-Webster.com and Dictionary.com. All list the pronunciation with the "K" sound in the middle first. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Emma B Date: 27 Jul 09 - 02:53 PM Babe on board |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: PoppaGator Date: 27 Jul 09 - 03:03 PM I thought I was in a time-warp when I saw this thread title. The "BOB" signs were introduced back in the 80s, and ~ here in the US, at least ~ are rarely seen anymore. When you do spot one of 'em, it's usually on a car that is 20 or more years old. Are they a new thing in the UK? Or enjoying a revival? |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: meself Date: 27 Jul 09 - 07:00 PM "When you do spot one of 'em, it's usually on a car that is 20 or more years old." And the character crammed into the car-seat is really big and ugly and giving orders to the driver and that doesn't look like milk in its bottle ... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Dave Hanson Date: 28 Jul 09 - 02:54 AM I suspect that really it is new parents who want to tell the world how clever they are by making their own baby. Dave H |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: GUEST,Chris B (Born Again Scouser) Date: 28 Jul 09 - 04:53 AM Do you know what? Making babies, bringing them up and taking care of them is clever. Taking the piss isn't. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Dave Hanson Date: 28 Jul 09 - 05:29 AM Ooooohh get you. Dave H [ not born again, always a Yorkshireman ] |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Will Fly Date: 28 Jul 09 - 06:20 AM Reminds of a sketch on the UKTV show "Not The Nine o'Clock News". Mel Smith drives down down streets in an old car, spraying bus queues with rainwater from puddles, swearing at other drivers and generally behaving very badly. The final camera shot is of the back of his car as he drives away. The yellow sticker in the rear window says "Bastard on Board!" |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Backwoodsman Date: 28 Jul 09 - 07:05 AM Where can I get one of those? |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Dave Hanson Date: 28 Jul 09 - 07:23 AM Love it Will, yeah where can I get one too. Dave H |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Will Fly Date: 28 Jul 09 - 07:38 AM You'll have to ask the BBC Props Department, I suspect! |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 28 Jul 09 - 11:31 AM Or you could try here. Google can find you just about anything. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: jeffp Date: 28 Jul 09 - 03:07 PM Kendall, some of the kids and adults around here can't find Earth on a globe. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Tangledwood Date: 28 Jul 09 - 06:29 PM I thought I was in a time-warp when I saw this thread title. The "BOB" signs were introduced back in the 80s, and ~ here in the US, at least ~ are rarely seen anymore. When you do spot one of 'em, it's usually on a car that is 20 or more years old. Are they a new thing in the UK? Or enjoying a revival? They're frequently seen in this part of Oz, and often on cars in supermarket carparks. The responsible thing to do would be smash one of their windows so that the poor baby doesn't get heatstroke in the closed vehicle. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: robomatic Date: 29 Jul 09 - 04:39 PM Actually saw one of these in the back of a 4WD station wagon/ mini SUV on my way in to work early this morning. Didn't see a baby but it was hard to know for sure as he whipped by me on his way to a red stop light, and I was aligning for a leisurely left. It was 0640 so if a baby was there, it was squawkin'! |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Gurney Date: 16 Nov 09 - 09:53 PM With regard to the rescue crew aspect: I find it hard to believe that they can see a sticker, but are likely to miss a booster seat or cot. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: MGM·Lion Date: 16 Nov 09 - 10:11 PM PEDANT note to Meself -- a sentence left unfinished for the sake of effect is not an ellipsis: it is an APOSEOPESIS. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: meself Date: 16 Nov 09 - 10:20 PM And that makes me mad, too. Madder, even .... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: MGM·Lion Date: 16 Nov 09 - 10:26 PM - tho it does admittedly often end with an ellipsis [...] if not with a dash, short [-] or long [—] — see wiki on both. Tho wiki, whilst giving an extensive quote from Virgil, in Latin & in translation, omits what I think the world's major literary example of aposeopesis [& this really should move this thread up above the line, Joe or Clone]: viz — "If you knew Susie like I know Susie..." |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: MGM·Lion Date: 16 Nov 09 - 10:29 PM - there, there, Meself... diddums... |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Bryn Pugh Date: 17 Nov 09 - 10:44 AM Dear Emma B - That Court Hearing had me fooled (as a Lawyer of not a few years' standing !) - I was on the point of PMing you for the reference ! As regards my own driving - anyone know where I might get a sticker which reads "Dyed-in-the-wool Arsehole behind the wheel" ? |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Mrs.Duck Date: 17 Nov 09 - 01:21 PM We had twins - which side should we unload them from? And yes I had a sticker that said 'twins on board' - I was proud of it! |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Joe Offer Date: 18 Nov 09 - 12:48 AM Darn. And all this time, I thought it meant that the parents had a child and they were proud and happy about it. I must remember to get my head out of the clouds.... I'm glad at least that Mrs. Duck sees things the way I do. |
Subject: RE: BS: Baby on board From: Jeanie Date: 22 Nov 09 - 05:21 AM Oooh - this thread has come up again - and I've seen some more of the responses to my comments on the safe side to load/unload children from a car. Surely, it is always safest to do this from the pavement side (i.e. not the traffic side) ? Yes - this may mean the effort of leaning across the back seat, especially if there is more than one child in car seats in the back, but isn't that a better option than putting yourself and your baby in a vulnerable position in moving traffic ? - jeanie |