Received from a friend who is in the property insurance business. It
is
well worth reading. This is one of those e-mails that if you didn't
send
it, rest assured someone on your list will suffer for not
reading it.
The original message was written by a lady whose brother and
his wife
learned a hard lesson this past week.
Their house burned down.. .nothing left but ashes. They have good
insurance
so the house will be replaced and most of the contents. That is
the good
news. However, they were sick when they found out the cause of the
fire.
The insurance investigator sifted through the ashes for several hours.
He
had
>> the cause of the fire traced to the master bathroom. He asked her
>> sister-in-law what she had plugged in the bathroom. She listed the
normal
>> things....curling iron, blow dryer. He kept saying to her, "No,
this
>> would be something that would disintegrate at high temperatures".
Then
>> her sister-in-law remembered she had a Glade Plug-In, in the
bathroom.
>> The investigator had one of those "Aha" moments. He said that was
the
>> cause of the fire. He said he has seen more house fires started
with
>> the plug-in type room fresheners than anything else. He said
the
>> plastic they are made from is THIN plastic.
He also said that in every case there was nothing left to prove that
it even
existed. When the investigator looked in the wall plug, the two
prongs
left from the plug-in were still in there. Her sister-in-law had
one of
the plug-ins that had a small night light built in it. She said she
had
noticed that the light would dim and then finally go out. She would
walk
in to the bathroom a few hours later, and the light would be back on
again. The investigator said that the unit was getting too hot, and
would
dim and go out rather than just blow the light bulb. Once it cooled
down
it would come back on. That is a warning sign . The investigator said
he
personally wouldn't have any type of plug in fragrance device
anywhere in
his house. He has seen too many places that have
been burned down due to them.
PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO ALL THE PEOPLE IN YOUR ADDRESS BOOK. NOT ONLY
COULD
IT SAVE SOMEONE'S HOUSE, BUT IT COULD SAVE SOMEONE'S LIFE.
~*IN GOD WE TRUST ~*BARBARA*~
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Photos
Ring in the New Year with Photo Calendars. Add photos, events, holidays,
whatever.
"Lyndell Thompson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
:
:
:
:
:
: Received from a friend who is in the property insurance
business. It
: is
: well worth reading. This is one of those e-mails that
if you didn't
: send
: it, rest assured someone on your list will suffer for
not
: reading it.
: ...
And also rest assured that when someone like me get it, it'll be
reported as the spam it is.
Done.
Lyndell Thompson wrote:
> ...
> He kept saying to her, "No,
> this
> >> would be something that would disintegrate at high temperatures".
> Then
> >> her sister-in-law remembered she had a Glade Plug-In, in the
> bathroom.
> >> The investigator had one of those "Aha" moments. He said that was
> the
> >> cause of the fire.
Uh, did you stop to consider that an 'investigator' could not possibly
reach the conclusion that a fires was started by the freshener when
all he knew was that one was used in the bathroom?
> He said he has seen more house fires started
> with
> >> the plug-in type room fresheners than anything else.
Considering the above, it woudl be no surprise if he concluded
that.
> He said
> the
> >> plastic they are made from is THIN plastic.
Which would provide less thermal insulation, and therfor
run cooler than THICK plastic.
> He also said that in every case there was nothing left to prove that
> it even
> existed. When the investigator looked in the wall plug, the two
> prongs
> left from the plug-in were still in there.
Note the first sentence says there would be no physical evidence,
the second says he found physical evidence.
> ...
> PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO ALL THE PEOPLE IN YOUR ADDRESS BOOK.
Aside form the considerations above, this last statment, ESPECIALLY IN
ALL CAPS, is a pretty clear indicator of hoax.
Then there is snopes.
--
FF
Lyndell Thompson wrote:
> So sorry everyone, I was checking e-mail and saw this from a friend and
> thought it was real. I didn't check to see if it was a hoax. I guess no one
> before him checked it either. I won't let it happen again. Thanks to all for
> setting the record straight.
>
Perhaps you would consider doing the internet a favor by sending
the hoax information to the person who sent the hoax to you,
and suggest he do the same.
--
FF
In article <[email protected]>,
Lyndell Thompson <[email protected]> wrote:
> So sorry everyone, I was checking e-mail and saw this from a friend and
> thought it was real. I didn't check to see if it was a hoax. I guess no one
> before him checked it either. I won't let it happen again. Thanks to all for
> setting the record straight.
See <http://www.comics.com/comics/pearls/archive/pearls-20060122.html>
for my opinion.
;-)
djb
--
The moral difference between a soldier and a civilian is that the soldier
accepts personal responsibility for the safety of the body politic of which he
is a member. The civilian does not. Robert A. Heinlein
"Lyndell Thompson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
Snip a bunch of stuff that is word for word from the snopes web site. At
best, there is no evidence to back up the rhetoric in the original post.
Snopes itself puts the claim in the category of "Undetermined", however the
devices are UL approved and no official fire investigations have proven the
devices to have been the cause of a fire.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
So sorry everyone, I was checking e-mail and saw this from a friend and
thought it was real. I didn't check to see if it was a hoax. I guess no one
before him checked it either. I won't let it happen again. Thanks to all for
setting the record straight.
Lyndell
"Lyndell Thompson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
>
>
>
> Received from a friend who is in the property insurance business. It
> is
> well worth reading. This is one of those e-mails that if you
> didn't send
Lyndell Thompson wrote:
> So sorry everyone, I was checking e-mail and saw this from a
> friend and thought it was real. I didn't check to see if it was a
> hoax. I guess no one before him checked it either. I won't let it
> happen again. Thanks to all for setting the record straight.
Lyndell, afer a while, you'll be able to tell when one of those so-
called warnings are actually a hoax. People make those up for the
express purpose of getting well meaning (but gullible) people to
spread them around. For the most part they're just harmless pranks. I
get them forwarded to me from time to time by slightly naive friends.
One of my favorites was the KFC genetically modified chicken warning.
If you've not seen it, look it up.
The fact is that at one point or another EVERYONE is at least somewhat
fooled by such an email. You're not alone by any means. Soon you'll be
able to spot them on sight.
Joe Barta
On Sun, 22 Jan 2006 21:22:18 GMT, Joe Barta <[email protected]> wrote:
>Lyndell Thompson wrote:
>
>> So sorry everyone, I was checking e-mail and saw this from a
>> friend and thought it was real. I didn't check to see if it was a
>> hoax. I guess no one before him checked it either. I won't let it
>> happen again. Thanks to all for setting the record straight.
>
>
>Lyndell, afer a while, you'll be able to tell when one of those so-
>called warnings are actually a hoax. People make those up for the
>express purpose of getting well meaning (but gullible) people to
>spread them around. For the most part they're just harmless pranks. I
>get them forwarded to me from time to time by slightly naive friends.
>One of my favorites was the KFC genetically modified chicken warning.
>If you've not seen it, look it up.
>
... hadn't seen that one before. Amazing.
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
If you're gonna be dumb, you better be tough
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Again? Check out
http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/household/glade.asp
--
Nahmie
Stupidity is not considered a handicap, park elsewhere.
"Lyndell Thompson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
>
>
>
> Received from a friend who is in the property insurance business. It
> is
> well worth reading. This is one of those e-mails that if you
> didn't send
> it, rest assured someone on your list will suffer for not
> reading it.
> The original message was written by a lady whose brother and
> his wife
> learned a hard lesson this past week.
>
Snipped
More internet horseshit. Do people believe these things?
"Lyndell Thompson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
>
>
>
> Received from a friend who is in the property insurance business.
It
> is
> well worth reading. This is one of those e-mails that if you
didn't
> send
> it, rest assured someone on your list will suffer for not
> reading it.
> The original message was written by a lady whose brother and
> his wife
> learned a hard lesson this past week.
>
> Their house burned down.. .nothing left but ashes. They have good
> insurance
> so the house will be replaced and most of the contents. That is
> the good
> news. However, they were sick when they found out the cause of
the
> fire.
> The insurance investigator sifted through the ashes for several
hours.
> He
> had
> >> the cause of the fire traced to the master bathroom. He asked
her
> >> sister-in-law what she had plugged in the bathroom. She listed
the
> normal
> >> things....curling iron, blow dryer. He kept saying to her, "No,
> this
> >> would be something that would disintegrate at high temperatures".
> Then
> >> her sister-in-law remembered she had a Glade Plug-In, in the
> bathroom.
> >> The investigator had one of those "Aha" moments. He said that
was
> the
> >> cause of the fire. He said he has seen more house fires started
> with
> >> the plug-in type room fresheners than anything else. He said
> the
> >> plastic they are made from is THIN plastic.
> He also said that in every case there was nothing left to prove that
> it even
> existed. When the investigator looked in the wall plug, the two
> prongs
> left from the plug-in were still in there. Her sister-in-law had
> one of
> the plug-ins that had a small night light built in it. She said she
> had
> noticed that the light would dim and then finally go out. She
would
> walk
> in to the bathroom a few hours later, and the light would be back
on
> again. The investigator said that the unit was getting too hot, and
> would
> dim and go out rather than just blow the light bulb. Once it
cooled
> down
> it would come back on. That is a warning sign . The investigator
said
> he
> personally wouldn't have any type of plug in fragrance device
> anywhere in
> his house. He has seen too many places that have
> been burned down due to them.
> PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO ALL THE PEOPLE IN YOUR ADDRESS BOOK. NOT
ONLY
> COULD
> IT SAVE SOMEONE'S HOUSE, BUT IT COULD SAVE SOMEONE'S LIFE.
>
>
>
>
> ~*IN GOD WE TRUST ~*BARBARA*~
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
------
> Yahoo! Photos
> Ring in the New Year with Photo Calendars. Add photos, events, holidays,
> whatever.
>
>