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Drug induced robbery
I came across the following articale and thought it may be of interest to international travelers. I can't personally validate it's authinticity, but it is interesting and seems possible:
"This Incident has been confirmed by Snopes. In Katy , TX |
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Thanks Mike
Thanks Mike, after checking the link you posted It's obvious your right! :oops2::oops2::oops2::oops2:
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I have yet to see anything which begins ¨Confirmed by Snopes.com¨ which has, in fact, been confirmed by Snopes. It´s a sure sign that nonsense will follow immediately.
The real puzzle is why would anyone expose themselves to humiliation by posting something without taking less than a minute to check it out themselves on Snopes? It´s ridiculously easy to do. Mark |
Just the name Burundanga was a dead giveaway.
Someone take this shit thread out of here, pronto! yeah, the world is a very dangerous place full of people out there waiting to get YOU!!! These kind of stupid posts go completely against the spirit of sites like these. My two bob of opinion... |
snopes is a website dedicated to urban legends
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Wow, no mercy
Wow, no mercy on this site. :) I formally apologize for my lack of judgement, failure to adaquately research the subject, and inconvienance I may have cause related to this post. However, I have now researched this and found the drug is actually "Scopolamine" and has indeed been tied to Columbia criminals. It is used by putting the drug into a drink or food, and true enough, it cannot be administered in large enough quanities through a "Business Card."
Additionally, I don't think anybody would diagree that there is a potential for drug induced robbery in South America, just as here in the US. Better safe that sorry and I would still recommend using caution and good sense. Let's Ride for the Cure - Home |
Hoaxes!
It's ALWAYS worth checking out the veracity of this sort of stuff. Indeed, as noted, "confirmed by Snopes" is almost a guarantee that it's crap.
Here's an old bit I wrote about this stuff - relates to an old virus hoax, but the concepts hold true. Maybe it's a case of digital attention-deficit disorder: Every so often, an old hoax resurfaces and snares a fresh crop of people who either missed, or simply don't remember, the last iteration. |
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