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View Full Version : Throw under the bus..discussion


kittygilchrist
09-30-2014, 06:16 PM
etymology - What's the origin of "throwing someone under the bus"? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange (http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/30698/whats-the-origin-of-throwing-someone-under-the-bus)
Where did this saying come from? Why is Greta talking about it?

Rags123
09-30-2014, 06:26 PM
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kittygilchrist
09-30-2014, 06:32 PM
I am reading the etymology where a character pushed his friend under bus wheels, stole his wallet and used his money.
Does this stuff happen to you from people you thought were friends?
What do you do about it?

graciegirl
09-30-2014, 08:13 PM
If a "friend" stole from me that would be the end of our friendship. It depends how much she stole and what she stole if I would call authorities.

Stealing is wrong. Stealing takes from a person the value of the work it took to earn the money to buy the item. I can't think of any circumstances where it would be understandable. I would never want to be around that person again.

DonH57
09-30-2014, 08:14 PM
I don't know where it originated but the author must have known one of my former coworkers who practiced this constantly until it caught up to him. Karma.

dbussone
09-30-2014, 08:15 PM
I don't know where it originated but the author must have known one of my former coworkers who practiced this constantly until it caught up to him. Karma.


What goes around comes around.

mtdjed
09-30-2014, 08:51 PM
If a "friend" stole from me that would be the end of our friendship. It depends how much she stole and what she stole if I would call authorities.

Stealing is wrong. Stealing takes from a person the value of the work it took to earn the money to buy the item. I can't think of any circumstances where it would be understandable. I would never want to be around that person again.

I asked my auto mechanic Vaughn at Lady Lake Tire if he ever got stiffed on checks. He said yes and then said that the person who stiffed him must have needed it more than he did. But the opportunity would not be available again.

tomwed
09-30-2014, 09:41 PM
What goes around comes around.

It's true. The wheels on the bus go round and round, round and round. :)

2BNTV
10-01-2014, 04:03 AM
There are a few things in life, that are black and white decisions.

To steal or not steal is one of them. Stealing is wrong!!!!!

Throwing a person under the bus should be a corporate term, as some people think that getting ahead is so important, they need to throw their co-workers "under the bus".

In the final analysis, they really haven't gain all that much. A fellow I worked with, (a nice guy), had a sign in his cube that read, "those who die with the most toys win". I had to restrain myself from writing, "those who die with the most toys, have toys that will get rusty". :D

redwitch
10-01-2014, 06:39 AM
My saying was always, "Those who die with most toys are still dead."

As to throwing someone under the bus, hasn't happened to me but I have seen it. The thrower seems to ultimately get caught and thrown down the garbage chute.

To me stealing is forgivable. Figure if you're so desperate you would steal from a friend, you need that item far more than I ever did. Doesn't mean you'll get a second chance to steal from me, though.

shcisamax
10-01-2014, 07:00 AM
When I was a teenager, I was friends with a girl who lived with her dad as her mom had passed away when she was very young. Her dad was an extremely successful realtor and they had a beautiful home but he was never home and paid no attention to her. In the five years I knew her and visited her home often, I never saw him. The living room was gorgeous, the dining room was a card table set up with a couple chairs because he was never there for meals. Many years later, she told me she had to fess up. She had taken food from our refrigerator to eat because there was never food at her house. It broke my heart. I guess I would have to say, I agree in general, but I can see situations that would over ride. It was shocking and terribly sad.