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This is a question Tightwads

There's saving money, and there's being tight: saving money at the expense of other people, or simply for the miserly hell of it.

Tell us about measures that go beyond simple belt tightening into the realms of Mr Scrooge.

(, Thu 23 Oct 2008, 13:58)
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Tightwad or opportunistic?
My dad when stationed in Korea in the 50's was a lorry driver. After getting his packed lunch of corned-beef sandwiches for his day on the road (this was still in the days of rationing), he would drive over to the American base. The guard on duty would wander over and my dad would point to the lettering on the cab-door.

"BCP 216" my dad would say
"BCP?" enquired the guard
"Bomber Comman, Pousan" my dad would reply.

He'd get waved through and my dad would park up and go in the US version of our NAFFI. Being an affable bloke and that the yanks were extremely friendly and kind, my dad would blag a huge meal out of them.
(, Mon 27 Oct 2008, 17:43, 9 replies)
that story
might work if anyone knew what any of it meant..
(, Mon 27 Oct 2008, 18:59, closed)
^^
what he said.

I don't geddit.
(, Mon 27 Oct 2008, 19:19, closed)
He is missing a "d"
from the end of "Bomber Command"
(, Mon 27 Oct 2008, 20:19, closed)
Ah
Now it makes sense.
(, Tue 28 Oct 2008, 16:21, closed)
Only just noticed that

(, Tue 28 Oct 2008, 19:55, closed)
Seems straightforward enough to me...
McCann Senior pretended that the "BCP" written on his lorry (registration number?) meant he was from an American unit, and they just let him onto the base, whereupon he would take advantage of their hostipality.
(, Tue 28 Oct 2008, 10:37, closed)
Don't worry; I understood it.
These young'uns round here, eh?
(, Mon 27 Oct 2008, 20:16, closed)

afhra.maxwell.af.mil/korean_war/korean_war_chronology/kwc_september1950.html

My interpretation is that thing were going badly in September of 1950, but then the air forces saved the ground forces from a major caning; and helped turn the tide of the war in favour of ROK and UN (i.e. US) forces.
(, Mon 27 Oct 2008, 22:52, closed)
Admittedly
by the time his boat got there, the ceasefire had been called.
(, Tue 28 Oct 2008, 19:56, closed)

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