Malicious Damage Act 1861 - Sending Letters Threatening To Burn or Destroy

Sending Letters Threatening To Burn or Destroy

  • Section 50: Sending Letters threatening to burn or destroy Houses, Buildings, Ships, &c.

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Famous quotes containing the words sending, letters, threatening, burn and/or destroy:

    I have heard arguments ... in favor of pardoning D. M. Bennett, convicted of sending obscene matter through the mails, viz., a pamphlet [by Ezra Hervey Heywood] of a polemical character in favor of free love. While I am satisfied that Bennett ought not to have been convicted, I am not satisfied that I ought to undertake to correct the mistakes of the courts—constantly persisted in—by the exercise of the pardoning power.
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822–1893)

    A man who publishes his letters becomes a nudist—nothing shields him from the world’s gaze except his bare skin. A writer, writing away, can always fix himself up to make himself more presentable, but a man who has written a letter is stuck with it for all time.
    —E.B. (Elwyn Brooks)

    Nothing is so threatening to conventional values as a man who does not want to work or does not want to work at a challenging job, and most people are disturbed if a man in a well- paying job indicates ambivalence or dislike toward it.
    Alice S. Rossi (b. 1922)

    There are those who never burn incense when things are going well, but then throw themselves at the Buddha’s feet when crises come.
    Chinese proverb.

    Of all our faults, the one we avow most easily is idleness; we persuade ourselves that it is allied to all the peaceable virtues, and as for the others, that it does not destroy them utterly, but only suspends the exercise of their functions.
    François, Duc De La Rochefoucauld (1613–1680)