Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wakizashi
Being Romanian I thought you might prefer some kind of torture more akin to a Certain Wallachian Impaler?
Oy! 'at's me jub! :whip:
Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wakizashi
Being Romanian I thought you might prefer some kind of torture more akin to a Certain Wallachian Impaler?
Too kind. They would just throw the guy in those stakes and he would probably die immediately or in maximum 1 hour because of wounds. So it's a pretty nice death.
How's about almost 48 hours of pain? If 1 hour is one year, he'd get more than double of what he did to his daughter. And the other 24 years are for even thinking that monstrous thing of locking and raping your daughter.
Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
Yes, go on, let your inner Fritzl speak. :sweatdrop:
Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
Too kind. They would just throw the guy in those stakes and he would probably die immediately or in maximum 1 hour because of wounds. So it's a pretty nice death.
How's about almost 48 hours of pain? If 1 hour is one year, he'd get more than double of what he did to his daughter. And the other 24 years are for even thinking that monstrous thing of locking and raping your daughter.
Trying to best Fritzl, are you? :idea2:
Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
Quote:
Originally Posted by edyzmedieval
Too kind.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impalement
It seems Vlad the Impaler was a more wicked man than you. :laugh4:
Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wakizashi
:book:
think abt it :sweatdrop:
Re: Bloody hell. Father locking his daughter in the basement for 24 years
There is an interesting article on Sp!ked that does a good job of 'de-Austrianizing' the case of freaky Fritzl and warns that we shouldn't go off on a Fritzl-hunt and give in to contemporaneous worries that everything that happens 'behind closed doors' is suspect and requires close formal and informal supervision.
In truth, there are not Josef Fritzls lurking everywhere. If Austrians do not ‘assume the worst in others’, that is a good thing. And if they feel alienated or dislocated from their neighbours and fellow citizens, then they are by no means alone: that is a common experience in the Western world today. One thing is certain, though: encouraging greater suspicion of our friends, neighbours and fellow bus travellers on the basis that any one of them might be a Fritzl will do nothing to heighten community solidarity – but it will do a lot to spread fear and doubt and, most likely, to encourage a hands-off attitude to other, potentially dangerous people.
Clickety