February 3rd, 2010

Filed under:
Mixed Bag

Graffiti in Morse Code?

I was in a government building recently, and visited the bathroom. This odd graffiti was on the stall wall:

What is our duty?

When you decipher the code, it reads “what is our duty”. This wasn’t the publicly accessible part of the building, so presumably this was written by a government worker. Is this a public servant asking his colleagues about their commitment? Or is he just making a bad pun on the term “doodie”?

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Comments: 5 Responses so far

. -. –. .-.. .- -. -.. / . -..- .–. . -.-. – … / – …. .- – / . …- . .-. -.– / — .- -. / .– .. .-.. .-.. / -.. — / …. .. … / -.. ..- – -.–

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Darren Reply:

.. + – .-. .. . -.. + – — + -.. . -.-. .. .–. …. . .-. + – …. .- – + ..- … .. -. –. + … — — . + -.. — -.. –. -.– + … .. – . + -… ..- – + .. – + -.. .. -.. -. – + .– — .-. -.-

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-.-- --- ..- .-. / -.-. --- -- -- . -. - / ..-. --- .-. -- / -- ..- -. --. . ... / . .-.. .-.. .. .--. ... . ...

It’s more famous as a flag signal anyways.

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Haha. Strange! But that would be a neat idea for a viral campaign.

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People who use morse code (amateur radio operators) don’t put a pipe or slash between words. Whoever wrote it took it from a website online that did the translation for them.

73! (radio slang for ttyl)

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