Jokes1 min ago
Have we lost faith in Human Kind?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by kazzee69. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I could go on for a long time about various things to do with this such as 20 years ago ppl used to leave their doors unlocked and you could safetly pick up hitch hikers etc etc
We all know this and so I won't bore anyone, yes I do think it is sad.
I always wonder why it is so? Crime rate has gone up which ia mostly why we feel we can't trust anyone anymore, but why has the crime rate gone up? Is it because of the rapidly growing population? Is it just me or are chavs taking over the country? Is it because of this? Is it because of the higher numbers of failed marriages and so troubled children from broken homes? (I have divorced parents and I am not saying all children in that situation grow up to be criminals btw!)
Who knows!!!?
However I would like to also add that I spent a year in New Zealand last year and I felt much safer there, the people are much more friendly and while on the bus I regularly got into conversations with the strangers around me, I even made long term friends that way! A fair amount of ppl I knew did leave their doors unlocked and I never hitch hiked but I was offered lifts by complete strangers!!
Actually on the 'crime has gone up' note I'd like to add that in many cases when the crime rate is reported as having gone up it's because there are more police catching the criminals. There's the same amount of crime but it's being brought to our attention more often, especially in cases involving children and violence towards women.
I'd love to be able to tell you a story with a happy ending but depressingly enough I can't think of one.
There was a letter in the papers last week about this very subject. An elderly man had been trying to change his wheel on the motorway hard shoulder late one night. A car stopped and three young men got out and did the job for him.
He said to them that it was extremely unusual for someone to stop and help on a busy motorway. They then told him that they had seen him from the other direction, got off at the next exit and turned round and driven back to help him!
The old man said they refused to leave their names or accept anything for their help and that this had really restored his faith in young people today.
Do you live in a city?
Populations have gone up a lot since I was born and brought up in London. If 1 person in 10,000 is a dangerous nut, increasing the population by a million places 100 more on the streets.
Then there's population pressure for resource, whether it's housing, schooling or just parking places. Starve 20 dogs in a pen and throw in 5 bones and see what happens.
In the village where I live I dropped my wallet one morning and when I went back looking for it somebody I didn't know caught up with me and waving my wallet asked me if I'd dropped it. They'd found my driving license and were on the way up to the address to post it back through my door.
Wild horses wouldn't make me live in London again now.
Mind you I'm always amazed how many people come home put up their feet and watch TV with a pizza most nights or go down the pub with a couple of old friends and complain there's no community where they live.
Okay, here's one.
A scruffy/dodgy man approached me at a bus stop and asked for 60p for the bus. I gave him 60p- he needed it, and it was nothing to me!
At least 2 years later the same man came up to me and gave me my 60p back. He said "you lent this to me ages ago- I've been looking out for you to give it back"! Now THAT I was not expecting!!
Another time I was at a bus shelter at night (I really must learn to drive) and a really dodgy tramp like man came up asking if he could borrow 3 quid. He was bright red, scruffy and looked very drunk. I said yes, and went to get my purse. He then explained, in a very well-spoken voice, that he was diabetic, needed insulin urgently, and needed to money to get a taxi to the hospital. I had initially judged him on his appearance, but the only reason he looked so ill was because he WAS ill!! The taxi came, and he went to hospital.
But yes, there are some lovely ones too. I've lost my wallet twice, and my cheque book twice - once with my card with it - and every time they've been returned with nothing taken.
I think Scarlett's are wonderful!
Sometimes worry I'm too helpful that it could get me into trouble sometimes, especially nw I live in a large city, but it's just me.
Always have to help people if I can, often helping strangers get to where they need to be, even taking them if poss, as I always worry they'll get lead astray by someone less well meaning but I do worry about my own safety now esp being a young female.
Have always done a lot of charity & voluntary work and some of the thing I've seen just amaze me.
Remember being out of a day trip as part of a residential volunteering project with the disabled. We'd just got everyone sorted and were sitting in a cafe about to order when a gentleman on a nearby table asked me if I was having a good Christmas (was Christmas Eve). He later got up and quietly came over and passed me a �20.00 note saying to get everyone's drinks and such, wished me a merry christmas and went on his way.
Charity collecting is a good one too, between the abuse you can get (always amazed me that) the amount of homeless people who come and give a donation (never asked to might I add) just amazed me. People who have almost nothing giving some of the little they do have. I remember quite an elderly guy dressed in rags sitting with a begging bowl calling me from the other side of the street one day.
Awful, but I thought he'd seen I was charity collecting and thought I was a soft touch. Went over anyhow and he said "You know what my dear, I've had a really good day today" and put some money in my tin.
Also did a charity jailbreak with my boyfriend at the time a few years ago. We hitch-hiked from the west coast of wales to just outside Glasgow in 24 hours and the kindness of the people we met was amazing.
Cont...
When we got to just out of Glasgow we were given a free ride to a better hitching point by a taxi driver we asked for advice then on running out of our 24 hours found a large store/shop (we had to get stuff to prove our challenge had been met). They weren't even open yet as it was a Sunday but took us inside, gave us breakfast which they wouldn't charge for, went into the back to get us a postcard we needed as there were none out front and even took it to stamp and post back for us to prove we'd been there.
They asked their delivery drivers if they could take us to a decent point to get back and when they couldn't gave a member of staff time off to drive us ot the nearest main service station where were cheekily asked the rather upmarket looking gentleman driving a mercedes if we could have a lift being cheeky and tongue in cheek.
He took us all the way from Glasgow to Birmingham!
Sure I have loads more, will have a think this aft :)