Anything that falls will fall in such a way that it will land in a location and manner to do the most damage. I discovered this in my hall ceiling today (1st pic.) Poking through was a metal bar. (3rd pic.). The second pic shows where the pointy side down poked through. I had patched it and then thought to take a picture. If it landed flat no damage; 2 inches to the left, no damage.
Have you ever noticed how we take something like this and extrapolate to make it a law? But we never see the many times something has fallen and done no damage to make that a law. Maybe that’s how laws are made in Congress, by viewing the negative and ignoring the positive.
An addition to Murphy’s Law
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An addition to Murphy’s Law
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- twistsol
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Re: An addition to Murphy’s Law
As a consummate pessimist, I always believe the worst as my opening position and at the close, things rarely turn out as expected and usually end up much better than I thought they would or could.
From my viewpoint, Murphy's law rarely holds true, and if it were truly a law, we'd have gone the way of the dinosaurs centuries ago.
On the other hand whenever Congress makes laws, Murphy seems to be working overtime.
From my viewpoint, Murphy's law rarely holds true, and if it were truly a law, we'd have gone the way of the dinosaurs centuries ago.
On the other hand whenever Congress makes laws, Murphy seems to be working overtime.
Thanks much,
Chris Phelps
Cheap tools are too expensive
2x Mark 5 520 and a 10ER
Chris Phelps
Cheap tools are too expensive
2x Mark 5 520 and a 10ER