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Carcass

Carcass

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Where's the Soap dispenser?!!!
Those barbarians.
LOL! I thought the same thing...those pesky soap dispensers must be hiding again.
Anyone want to guess the IQ of these vandals? Sure can't be too high.
Makes you wonder why people can't look at a sink without smashing it huh.
Dang idjits....
Sometimes, I could just tell vandals to go rub thier 2 IQ points together and start a fire! Wait..... bad idea!
What makes a vandal tick? Why not just admire and walk away?
now that is what I call hard water :rimshot:
You can sure tell it isn't America. Vandals, but no spray paint.
Joe: "Hard water".....LOL.....:-)
Seriously why??? Why do that?
It all begins with Mom and Dad, if there are no morals and values taught, no sense of respect for beauty or other people’s property ingrained into a childs thoughts, senseless acts of stupidity result.
I think there has been a decline in the respect given to the property of others. When I was a child in the 60's, my parents and the parents of all my friends were strict about teaching us not to cut across the lawns of others. When I raised my children, I taught them the same rule. They obeyed (at least when I was watching), but thought I was crazy because none of their friends had parents who enforced that rule. When trick-or-treating at Halloween, I was taught to stay on the sidewalk while walking to doors, not across the lawn. Today I see parents actually leading their children across the lawns of others, because it's quicker and easier. I've seen parents let their children go into the unfenced yard of someone they don't know, and the parents stand and watch while the child plays on the swing set or tire swing. It's like the lack of a fence makes it public property, or that their child is so special s/he should never be denied anything. After shopping, too many people just abandon their shopping cart in the parking lot, rather than returning it to the store or placing it in the cart storage space. I know these are little things, and maybe I'm making a bit deal of nothing. But if it's nothing, then why not return the cart, stay on the sidewalk, etc? It is the little things, the things we do when no one is looking, that reveals our character. If we want to be trusted in big things, we have to demonstrate that we can be trusted in small things. With abandoned buildings, it seems like many people think it is okay to destroy them because they're not in use anyway--forgetting that the building is still owned by somebody, that perhaps it could be used again (either as a whole or in salvaged parts removed unharmed from the building), and that craftsmen years ago worked hard to make the items so thoughtlessly destroyed.
this picture tricks me is there sinks on both sides or is that a long mirror?????
Two rows of sinks. Look at the third one back. The front sink is smashed, the one behind it is intact.
DME well said!
people have no respect
How can one be sure it was vandalized?
Sarah, vandalized, because they are broken, and if you look at the floor closely, you can see what looks to be a steel rod, probably the tool of choice.
I think these vandals are compensating for a really small Johnson. Or they're just idiots.
yeah yeah the damage is done now wheres the supa supa glue

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