Is it really true that the brits throw poop out the window? @SmallishBeans @EthosLab @GoodTimesWithScar "I love it when they argue" Gosh scar 😰 #boatboys #ethoslab #hermitcraft #minecraft #smallishbeans #hermitcraft10 #goodtimeswithscar
I’m pretty sure handling salmon suspiciously is currently a crime in the UK. Not punishable by death, but pretty ridiculous. Like imagine getting arrested for playing Fish Jenga…
Probably someone did that to the royal family somewhere in the medieval times. So, they did that to protect their cucumbers. Having a law that may execute a person from ravaging a cucumber plant makes more sense than pretending to be an Egyptian.
The poop out the window thing happened in medieval Paris. They used to warn pedestrians shouting "gare à l'eau" before throwing their sewer water out the window
It is Scotland that he was thinking of. They still have the infrastructure for it and can use it but they have to call out that they are doing it first.
@@pedrochapada190 Im guessing your not from Europe to be so blatantly wrong. The alley ways gave groves near the edge of the buildings for the black water to flow to the sewers. These buildings and roads predate indoor plumbing. In the city outhouses weren't an option either.
back in the day in Edinburgh the phrase Gardy-loo was used before emptying chamber pots out the window it's a warped version of gardez l'eau approximately French for 'watch out for the water'
Probably unintentional little detail that caught my ears: Scar saying "oh my god!" like the Impulse horn. I think he has heard it so many times that it got stuck in his ears, so he unintentionally imitates it without realizing.
In colonial México people yelled "aguas" (lit. waters) before emptying chamber pots to alert any pass-byers on the streets. Even today, "aguas" is still used to tell someone to be careful lol
The thing with weird British laws is that they exist, but at the same time more laws were created after them which makes them null, and in the UK the newest law has legal precedent. So with the killing a Scotsman with a bow and arrow legally from the bridge thing, laws were passed afterwards such as new ones on murder and manslaughter which make the first law null. Our constitution is basically a hojpoj of stuff, with whatever's at the top of the pile is actual law. It's really weird when you have an uncodified constitution. One of the biggest disadvantages is that it's really hard to know what rights you have as a citizen, unlike in America where you can technically just read the constitution and know what rights and stuff you have.
in Newcastle there's cows in a field near st james park (the footie stadium) near uni flats, which is pretty central, so i guess there some cows close to a city center lmao
Ethos not far off with the legal term of throwing poop out the window, back in the chamber pot days you were supposed to yell lardy loo, as a warning, I don’t know if it was required or not, but it’s something
Love York. Great place to visit. There's a place in the Shambles that sells York eggs, which are similar to Scotch eggs, but better. Wouldn't want to live in there, tho - too many people throwing poop out the windows.
0:22 fun fact I’m British and thought badgers were extinct until I got my license and saw one as road kill and freaked out, also from the Cotswolds and have fallen bcos of a rabbit hole (and tripped many times from my house rabbit)
Common law, speaks for it self. Ie:- the house of commons is a place where our parliament resides and just outside there is a common and you can still legally graze your sheep there.
1. Many cities have cows - in their zoos 2. Re. Stupid laws; there is a law in one state* in the U.S. where it is illegal to carry an ice cream cone in your pocket. I have no idea why this law was passed. Or what set of circumstances brought it about. * I forget which state. It's been a minute. But yes, it is a real law. They just said its to much trouble to get it off of the books, and they have more important issues to see to. .⚖️