this photo has often puzzled me its as if it could be fake on all the discrepancies it shows ....to me its like a spot the mistakes picture ...so many things wrong about this photo ..it deserves a thread of its own
in the last so called photo maddie is practically white ...as you would expect children to be [factor 50 etc]...yet look fully tanned on the tennis photo...apart from her hand
we don't know who took it ....or on what day ..there are discrepancies ...as to it being.took on .....Tuesday/Wednesday/Thursday
who's was the camera that took it.....no other photo's took at the same time ....
if maddie had been playing tennis....she would not have been wearing sandals [safety issues etc] it would have been trainers ...we know maddie had a pair
why would she wear that hat .... and be holding adult tennis balls ..not soft ones...what is wrong with her inner hand
her arms are brown ...scratched and bruised ...not seen on last photo
is the pitch wet...and would children's tennis ...be played next to an adult one ...
bruising on her legs ....marks on her arm...this picture just does not add up ....there are several things not right with it ...
it is like a spot the mistakes ..picture..in a magazine...I'm sure other's...can find more
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http://i84.servimg.com/u/f84/13/17/40/69/girl_m10.jpg
I do not want to answer all the points, so for the moment, I'll stick to just one.
Trying to apply UK (or similar) health and safety issues in Portugal is a non-starter.
Try Google StreetView on the A22. It is classed as a motorway. It would not meet UK standards. There is a concrete barrier separating the two streams of traffic. That barrier looks like it would flip a vehicle to the other side in most accidents. Then look at the safety verge. It is so narrow that anyone breaking down has to fill around half of the slow lane.
The Portuguese idea of H&S is perhaps 30 to 50 years behind the UK.
They are building about 300m from me. The site is fenced off. It has a 'gatekeeper' control re workers and deliveries. It has signs up requiring hard hats, steel toecaps and fluorescent jackets. All good stuff. But yesterday they all wandered off and left the gates wide open, so I wandered on-site to see how they were getting on. An open building site, no control, no hard hat, no metal toe caps, no fluorescent jacket. Any child could have done the same.
This is Portugal.
The idea that kids don't run in sandals of the type M is wearing just does not pass muster here. I've got no idea what would happen in the UK, so those sandals might, or might not, scotch the rumour that the photo was taken in the UK. And whoever took the photo seemed to be OK about the sandals.