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Posted By: jackie On: 10 Jul 2009 At: 9:26pm
Hi monica, it was Dundas street, at the back of the cemetary, they got £150,000 each, not bad eh
Posted By: Monica On: 10 Jul 2009 At: 8:54am
Jackie, which street was it? I heard it was near the Old Kirk - Church St / Panbrae Road? It’ll be in the Journal today, no doubt!
Posted By: jackie On: 9 Jul 2009 At: 9:47pm
I was fortunate to celebrate with some of my family and neighbours who won some of the 1.5 million postcode lottery, I think your theory of a poor peoples tax has been hit on the head as the street that by chance won was what I would describe as being one of the more affluent street in Bo’ness.
Posted By: Monica On: 9 Jul 2009 At: 1:50pm
That’s inetesting… so what if I was to steal some money or fiddle the books to get some money and give it to you, would you still think there is nothing wrong with taking it and recycling it to do some good in our communities?
Posted By: iTalker On: 12 Jul 2009 At: 10:35pm
Jackie and Monica
Thanks for your posts. However I do think it is a fact that people on lower incomes buy more lottery tickets than those on higher incomes. So to that extent it is a kind of tax because very few people actually win. Regarding Monica’s comment no of course not i would be breaking the law if i knowingly took stolen goods.The lottery is a contract that people willingly and knowingly enter into. All i’m saying is when there is money that can be used for doing good should we not take it?