Unless I am mistaken aren't both of those chemicals available? How else do 
people do experiments and such? 

And anyone can take an outlandish example and try to compare. How does that, 
not logical, example compare with a real-life use of a tool (cell phone) while 
driving? I know I should not be perpetuating this conversation but I guess I am 
just bad. 

I will continue to use my cell phone. And, please, confirm for us that you do 
not use a cell phone in any way when driving - not with bluetooth, or with a 
passenger doing the phone handling, or in any other way using a cell phone. 
Meaning you could always put it in the trunk you are so dilligent about never 
using your cell phone in the car. 

Sheesh - I love when one set of people tries to decide how another set of 
people will live. But then now I have opened for people to talk about basic 
laws and many other irrelevant examples. Sheesh. 

Edward Fultz 
[email protected] 
(978) 807-4225 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tony Cooke" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 4:50:00 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [Treo] Civility 






Don Ferguson wrote: 
> 
> 
> Wait, I have a question, having read past posts a bit more thoroughly. 
> 
> Prof. Craig, 
> 
> If we take it as a given (and I don't) that is sufficiently less safe to 
> drive while talking on a cell phone than to drive NOT talking on a cell 
> phone, and that dialing a cell phone is even less safe, regardless of the 
> efficiency of the method used, that one should never, ever do it, why do we 
> all have these devices? 
> 
> Nearly everywhere I go there is a land line phone I could use. I choose to 
> use my cell phone because it's convenient, and I certainly talk on the cell 
> phone nearly every minute I'm in the car. The time in the car would be a 
> completely productivity sink, else. 
> 
> Am I an ass of the self-centered variety? 
> 
> :-) 
> 
> Cheers, 
> 
> Don 

Can I ask a supplementary question here? 

I`m thinking of putting a mixture of arsenic and strychnine into a jar 
in my kitchen marked `coffee`. Now I don`t intend to kill anyone with 
it, so can anyone here give me a location to buy these chemicals? 

Tks. 

:-) 

I rest my case. 

:-) 

-- 
Tony Cooke 
www.tonycooke.co.uk 
contactable at tony.j.cookeATgooglemailDOTcom 
Third Law of Advice: Simple advice is the best advice. 



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