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Friday 30 December 2011

left behind

From: Abandonalia

"So, being Catholic and all, I don’t expect to be Raptured tomorrow. Instead, I’m staking out Fundamentalist houses so, in case they do get raptured, I can loot their stuff.
     And maybe rescue some of their poor children who got left behind because they just weren’t faithful enough. ;-)"
— Dean Esmay, Dean's World
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"Ever wonder what happens to the loose change that harried travelers leave behind at airport checkpoints?
     One lawmaker has his sights on the unclaimed money, which added up to $376,480.39 in the 2010 fiscal year.
     At Los Angeles International Airport alone, $19,110.83 was left at checkpoints, according to a Transportation Security Administration spokesman. That’s in addition to $500 in poker chips left behind at LAX a few years ago and later converted by TSA to cash.
     Congress allows TSA to use the unclaimed money to help fund its operations."
Los Angeles Times
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"Each year, millions of suitcases don't arrive where they should. And that count seems to be rising. According to the Air Transport Users Council, more than 40 million bags were misplaced by airlines in 2007, compared with 30 million bags just two years earlier.
     Most lost suitcases find their way to their proper destination within 24 hours. But of the bags lost in 2007, more than one million — or one bag per 2,000 passengers — were never recovered, the council said.
     Some of these lost bags sit at airports for months waiting to be claimed, before their contents are finally sold, donated or dumped. What happens to travellers' new cameras and dirty underwear depends on which airline carried the suitcase, and where in the world the plane landed.
     Bags abandoned at Heathrow Airport are auctioned off at Greasby's in southern London. In the United States, thousands of unclaimed suitcases are unpacked each year and their contents sold at the 40,000-square-foot Unclaimed Baggage Centre in Scottsboro, Ala."
CBC
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"[...] Gold, silver, jewelry, collectible currency and high-end wristwatches are among the dozens of items pulled from abandoned safe deposit boxes that the state is going to start auctioning off if the rightful owners don't come forward to claim them. [...]
     All of the contents have gone unclaimed for a period of at least nine years and the state is legally permitted to liquidate these items at auction, although it tries to find the rightful owners first.
This is the seventh time that the Commonwealth has used eBay to liquidate its unclaimed tangible property holdings. Before that, the treasury held a live auction for such items, a process that was far less profitable because of its limited reach to potential bidders.
     Last year’s eBay auction raised nearly $480,000 for the state’s General Fund through the sale of 2,418 separate bid lots, nearly three times the amount of money generated from comparable live auctions of the past, the treasurer's office said."
WCVB TV Boston
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"I have been preoccupied with trying to imagine what must be going through christians' [sic] minds as they contemplate this momentous occasion (for them). Which brings me to the subject of clothes. What do you wear for The Rapture, or to a Rapture Party, for that matter? Are you clothed when Raptured or -- heaven forbid! -- might you leave all your clothes behind and be Raptured in the nude? If so, this leaves room for some weighty erm ... challenges ... and for some mighty entertaining pranks, some of which also provide a great way to get rid of all those clothes lurking in your drawers and closets that you no longer wear.
     But maybe christians will be Raptured whilst clothed? If that's the case, then I am sure they are confronted with a different dilemma: what to wear for this most auspicious of all the days in their lifetimes? Will christians wear their 'Sunday Best?' What exactly is their 'Sunday Best?' Perhaps their wedding clothes? Or ... dare I suggest this? ... Funeral clothes?"
— GIRLSCIENTIST, Guardian
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