Sorry to dig this one up from the past, but I was just double poling the answer to this prior to doing the 6 double gangs in the kitchen - you think that's enough for a kitchen?
There are some good replies.
The best is last, perhaps the one I most agree with in terms of safety. I now never trust the breakers or the sockets to be truly off, the are a couple of sockets lurking around, for example, that are still 100% live when the break for that room is off, since the house is so old and so many different people have added, removed or modified the rings.
But specifically, I like the point about the switches being easy to flick back on.
At one point, I was adding a new plug to an extension cable for a female cat. Mid doing it, and with me stripping the wires with my teeth, she plugged the other end back in.
I stopped, fairly stunned, and said "I have this in my mouth...."
"Yeah, but it's not switched on"
There is a small possibility (quite a large one) she was intending to frazzle me for fun. However, an equally large chance is the womans ability to confuse the ordering of events. E.g. Why plug it in now and not when it's done? What difference does it make to the time or effort involved? If that's their version of multitasking, it's horrifically bad.
Yes, I know, teeth stripping is bad. I never do it on solid cores, anything that's permanently wired and always have the sockets off, the cable unplugged and the other end in sight, or beside me.
And I've since bought one of those natty strippers that actually works, the snap pliers kind.
But damn......
I have also developed a habit of never touching the bare connectors even if I assume it's dead. I'll spread the wires as far apart as possible, then only touch the insulation a good way back, the plastic of the plates and do the wiring with a VDE screwdriver. I also duct tape the bare connectors if I'm leaving the room.
This forum is another example. On most, if I click reply, it'll autoquote the last reply to show me it's replying. But here, I can click new topic or reply and the pages look identical at a glance.