BSSTG said:
GreetingsThe problem I've had with them in the past was that it was too hard to get the plug inserted and even harder to get them out. That said, the ones I've seen recently seem to be improved. Someone like my 92 year old aunt who lives alone could have problems with the things. I'll never forget my mom freaking out when she caught my little brother sticking a hair pin into an outlet and that's been 50 years ago.
BS
If your mom and aunt are in their 90's then they grew up not long after the current wars, no doubt they were very afraid of electricity:
Wikipedia -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_Currents
Current wars[edit] Edison's publicity campaign Edison carried out a campaign to discourage the use[18] of alternating current, including spreading disinformation on fatal AC accidents, publicly killing animals, and lobbying against the use of AC in state legislatures. Edison directed his technicians, primarily Arthur Kennelly and Harold P. Brown,[19] to preside over several AC-driven killings of animals, primarily stray cats and dogs but also unwanted cattle and horses. [20] Acting on these directives, they were to demonstrate to the press that alternating current was more dangerous than Edison's system of direct current.[21] He also tried to popularize the term for being electrocuted as being "Westinghoused". Years after DC had lost the "war of the currents," in 1903, his film crew made a movie of the electrocution with high voltage AC, supervised by Edison employees, of Topsy, a Coney Island circus elephant which had recently killed three men.[22]
Edison opposed capital punishment, but his desire to disparage the system of alternating current led to the invention of the electric chair. Harold P. Brown, who was being secretly paid by Edison, built the first electric chair for the state of New York to promote the idea that alternating current was deadlier than DC.[23]
When the chair was first used, on August 6, 1890, the technicians on hand misjudged the voltage needed to kill the condemned prisoner, William Kemmler. The first jolt of electricity was not enough to kill Kemmler, and only left him badly injured. The procedure had to be repeated and a reporter on hand described it as "an awful spectacle, far worse than hanging." George Westinghouse commented: "They would have done better using an axe."[24]