DE MIÉRT
lóg egy pár Converse a lámpadróton??
Veszprém, a rejtélyek városa.gondolom, valamelyik idiota latta foton vagy a teveben, hogy Amerikaban ezt csinaljak. Kar, hogy ott ez a megolt bandatagok emleket szolgalja
A number of sinister explanations have been proposed as to why this is done. The foremost is bullying in which a bully steals a pair of shoes and puts in a position where the victim cannot reach it. Some also say that shoes hanging from the wires advertise a local crack house where crack cocaine is used and sold[2] (in which case the shoes are sometimes referred to as “Crack Tennies”).[citation needed] It can also relate to a place where heroin is sold to symbolize the fact that once you take heroin you can never ‘leave’: a reference to the addictive nature of the drug. Others claim that the shoes so thrown commemorate a gang-related murder, or the death of a gang member, or as a way of marking gang turf.[3] A newsletter from the mayor of Los Angeles, California cites fears of many Los Angeles residents that “these shoes indicate sites at which drugs are sold or worse yet, gang turf,” and that city and utility employees had launched a program to remove the shoes.[4] However, the practice also occurs along relatively remote stretches of rural highways that are unlikely scenes for gang murders, and have no structures at all to be crack houses.
Other less sinister explanations have been ventured for the practice. Some[who?] claim that shoes are flung to commemorate the end of a school year, or a forthcoming marriage as part of a rite of passage. In Scotland, it has been said that when a young man has lost his virginity he tosses his shoes over telephone wires to announce this to his peers.[5][verification needed] It has been suggested that the custom may have originated with members of themilitary, who are said to have thrown military boots, often painted orange or some other conspicuous color, at overhead wires as a part of a rite of passage upon completing basic training or on leaving the service.[6] In the 1997 film Wag the Dog, shoe tossing features as an allegedly spontaneous cultural manifestation of tribute to Sgt. William Schumann, played by Woody Harrelson, who has purportedly been “shot down behind enemy lines” in Albania.
Others claim that the shoes are stolen from other people and tossed over the wires as a sort of bullying tactic, or as a practical joke played ondrunkards.[6] Others simply say that shoe flinging is a way to get rid of shoes that are no longer wanted, are uncomfortable, or do not fit.[5][verification needed] It may also be another manifestation of the human instinct to leave their mark on, and decorate, their surroundings.[6] It has been reported that workmen often throw shoes if they are not paid for waxing floors.[citation needed]
In some neighborhoods, shoes tied together and hanging from power lines or tree branches signify that someone has died. The shoes belong to the dead person. The reason they are hanging, legend has it, is that when the dead person’s spirit returns, it will walk that high above the ground, that much closer to heaven.[5][verification needed] Another superstition holds that the tossing of shoes over the power lines outside of a house is a way to keep the property safe from ghosts. Yet another legend involves that shoes hanging from telephone wires signals someone leaving the neighborhood onto bigger and better things.[7] [8] Of course, only each individual shoe-thrower knows why his/her pair of shoes now hangs from a wire.
(via starsheeper-deactivated20120928)
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morati likes this
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reszegbroker likes this
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terta reblogged this from scheerti and added:
Bukarest, a kép közepén egy 3-as földelt elosztó…
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minuszot reblogged this from gyomberke and added:
captain obvious leszek, de fűző összeköt - forgalommentes időszak megvár - néhány dobásból odáig feldob - a cipők...
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minuszot likes this
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kecsopbeno reblogged this from gyomberke and added:
szerintem ezzel jelzik, hogy itt az utca végén adnak fényt :)
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kecsopbeno likes this
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mmatild likes this
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sronti reblogged this from deadmanride and added:
Nekem egy darabig még későkamasz koromban a plafonról lógó lámpabúrán voltak szétjött tornacipőim, egyszerűen azért,...
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scheerti reblogged this from szarvas and added:
Muhaha, helló Cserhát ltp. Egyébként meglepően könnyű feldobni úgy bármit, hogy fent is maradjon, én 10-12 évesen íjat...
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ejnanana reblogged this from szarvas
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ejnanana likes this
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litmusconfig reblogged this from szarvas and added:
mióta építik ezt a csodálatos körforgalmat, nem sokat jártam a Kossuth utcánál északabbra - hát látszik is, kicsit nem...
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klucksize likes this
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taste-like likes this
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szarvas reblogged this from deadmanride and added:
Ismeretlen E-ON-os emlekmuve.
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glancetoastare likes this
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muszeresz reblogged this from deadmanride and added:
én meg lejártam a lábam egy pár dorkóért… micsoda pazarlás!
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hanzelkazikmund likes this
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csvitya reblogged this from hanzelkazikmund and added:
Vagy Oligarchák.
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hanzelkazikmund reblogged this from gyomberke and added:
A mondás szerint Veszprémben vagy fúj a szél, vagy harangoznak, vagy cipő lóg a lámpadróton.
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gyomberke reblogged this from hirbehozo and added:
valahogy egyiket sem tudom elképzelni Veszprémben, de leginkább azt nem, hogy HOGY A JÓISTENBE tették oda fel...
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eszpee likes this
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gyomberke posted this