Kimmer, you can turn off Javascript in your browser, and the problem goes away.
Thanks, Paddy.
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Or...view the page source, copying and pasting the section you want and then either turning it into proper HTML (adding the tags) and opening that in a browser and copying the displayed text (which seems rather a lot of work to me) or using Word to edit out whatever HTML tags are in there.
Page Source popped into BBEdit and I can easily tell BBEdit to remove all HTML tags. Or I can open a new HTML page and pop the stuff in and have BBEdit help me clean up any missing HTML. Easy-peasy-lemon-squeezy. (And what was the British sitcom where the son kept saying this???)
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Annoying that they've done this, but it may be to stop people from copying the urban legends and sending them 'round again.
LOL! I still remember the day a friend sent me an urban legend and I pointed her to Snopes and 'splained it wasn't true and she shot me back a note and said she didn't care. She thought it was a great story and showed this person in a good light and she was going to keep passing it on.
I set up a filter to auto-trash her emails and quite responding to her. She's probably still sharing untruths and hoping they turn into truths by sheer force.
ABD, it's a lost cause.
I do sometimes like to pull a small amount of text from Snopes, especially when they present facts and backup. So now I know why I can't any longer without doing the work around.
Thanks!