Website review: The Columbus Dispatch - Local/State
Slightlybusy discovered this in Bizarre/Oddities
•8 reviews since Oct 12, 2006
bizarre
•dispatch.com/news-story.php
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Reviews of this website

Slightlybusy discovered 22 months ago- Wanting to go to jail because of unemployment is a sad case.

carouselle rated 21 months ago- We should all hang our heads in shame that scenarios like this are taking place in our own country. A navy veteran chooses to go to prison for 3yrs. because he can't afford to live. This is only one of them folks. This is happening all over this country. People who can't get decent jobs or health care or food and medicine they so desperately need. And I doubly so, because this happened in my own state. Please don't anyone tell me how well the economy is doing. That's a lie and a joke that isn't at all funny! Somebody please remind me why I should vote on Nov.7th.I've forgotten.

travellersside rated 21 months ago- From the page: "It's unfortunate you feel this is the only way to deal with the situation" To be honest - it seems like the only sane solution.

piltot172 rated 21 months ago- funny stuff

emfb rated 21 months ago- One Mans Early Retirement Plan From the page: "Timothy Bowers handed his landlady the keys to his apartment and mailbox and the laundry room and told her he probably wouldn't be back. At 62, he hadn't had steady work for almost three years. He'd been a cabdriver and worked for Encyclopedia Britannica, but he could find only odd jobs after the drug wholesaler he made deliveries for closed in 2003. So he walked to the Speedway gas station around the corner and ate a couple of hot dogs on the "Two for $2" special. Bowers then walked a couple of blocks to the Fifth Third Bank at 5055 W. Broad St. He handed a teller a note that said this was a robbery and to put loose cash in an envelope. The teller put four $20 bills and a dye pack in the envelope and handed it to him. She pushed the silent-alarm button. Bowers turned and walked to the security guard standing in the lobby. He handed the guard the envelope and told him that this day, May 1, was his day to be a hero."