- Third time the charm ? - 2 Updates
- Vegetable processing plants are next - 7 Updates
- I just ate a frozen meal :( - 2 Updates
- Grocery update in my area - 1 Update
- A sincere apology to RFC Facebook - 2 Updates
- Greta Thunberg - 3 Updates
- Smart cars collecting food parcels - 4 Updates
- A sincere apology to RFC Facebook - 2 Updates
- Where's Ed? - 2 Updates
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 01 12:21AM -0700 On Thursday, April 30, 2020 at 3:42:57 PM UTC-10, Bruce wrote: > >Since you have never given an overview on anything, who cares if you have more of an overview. What's your favorite soy sauce? Who knows? You got to give me something to work with. If you don't have anything to give, I got to assume you're just saying stuff to get a response. That's the tactics of a poser/loser. > My favourite is the naturally brewed type, not the chemical rushed > industrial type. We use Kikkoman because it's also readily available. You're some guy that read some other guy that read some other guy that wrote hydrolyzed soy sauce was bad. None of yoose guys have ever tasted the stuff nor can yoose say why it's bad because you don't have a whit of experience to draw from. Yoose guys are creating something out of thin air. I've got a bunch of soy sauces in stock, including Aloha shoyu. None of them tastes bad. I have tasted bad soy sauce - some American brand. I can tell you exactly why it tasted bad - it was cut with water and tasted awfully weak. My guess is that most Americans couldn't tell the difference between good soy sauce and bad if they were knocked upside the head with a bottle of the stuff. That is, unless, they grew up on the stuff. |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: May 01 06:06PM +1000 On Fri, 1 May 2020 00:21:31 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net> wrote: >> industrial type. We use Kikkoman because it's also readily available. >You're some guy that read some other guy that read some other guy that wrote hydrolyzed soy sauce was bad. None of yoose guys have ever tasted the stuff nor can yoose say why it's bad because you don't have a whit of experience to draw from. Yoose guys are creating something out of thin air. I've got a bunch of soy sauces in stock, including Aloha shoyu. None of them tastes bad. >I have tasted bad soy sauce - some American brand. I can tell you exactly why it tasted bad - it was cut with water and tasted awfully weak. My guess is that most Americans couldn't tell the difference between good soy sauce and bad if they were knocked upside the head with a bottle of the stuff. That is, unless, they grew up on the stuff. On the one hand, you have a lot of experience with soy sauce. On the other hand, you have no standards. Food is only about survival for you. Anything more -quality for instance- is pretentious in your book. So be it. |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Apr 30 10:32PM -0700 On 2020 Apr 30, , Cindy Hamilton wrote > Nobody wants to work if it endangers their life. Him waving his hand > and saying "everybody back to work" is foolish and simplistic. And yet it isn't happening, because he ceded the power to open up the states to the respective governors, and nearly all are scared sh*tless to make the call. The rest will act as petri dishes, and we go from there. Personally, I think it's too soon, but it has to happen sometime in the near future. Nobody knows sh*t, but we're making strides, we think and hope. leo |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: May 01 03:38PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Apr 2020 22:32:37 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >> and saying "everybody back to work" is foolish and simplistic. >And yet it isn't happening, because he ceded the power to open up the >states to the respective governors He ceded power? Didn't the governors always have that power? And didn't everybody know that, except Trump? Correct me if I'm wrong. I'm not American, you know. |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Apr 30 10:41PM -0700 On 2020 Apr 30, , graham wrote > Tell us, what is there to admire in this moronic POTUS? How's that sap that runs your tiny population country doing? He's a dandy with a pedigree, I'll give him that. What were his other qualifications? Did you vote for him? If so, why? leo |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 30 10:54PM -0700 Leo wrote: > Personally, I think it's too soon, but it has to happen sometime in the > near future. > Nobody knows sh*t, but we're making strides, we think and hope. Here ya go, Illannoy guv Pritzker IS scared shitless [although his missus flew down to Florida recently to holiday at their $12 million dollar horse farm, LOL!) and this article sez we will be on lockdown past July 4th weekend; I expect to see wide - spread civil disobedience if this happens: https://www.gunssavelife.com/a-deficit-of-courage-gov-pritzker-plans-to-keep-illinois-closed-until-after-july-4-weekend/ A DEFICIT OF COURAGE: Gov. Pritzker plans to keep Illinois closed until after July 4 weekend April 28, 2020 "Two independent sources inside Governor Pritzker's administration have confirmed that their boss plans to keep Illinois closed until after the July 4th weekend. Neither official would talk on record, but both echoed the same potentially bad news for Land of Lincoln residents. And they cited the governor's risk-aversion for his paralysis in making moves to open Illinois for business. Last week, Governer Jay Robert Pritzker (aka Judgement: Bad) extended his Executive Order and related "rules" and other edicts through the end of May. However, the gov. has already faced one successful lawsuit blocking his unconstitutional restrictions. Additionally, a number of sheriffs and police chiefs have announced they have no intention of enforcing Pritzker's economically disastrous orders. Behind the scenes and news conferences, Pritzker plans to keep Illinois closed through the end of the Independence Day weekend. Why? Because Chicago is the epicenter of Chinese flu cases in Illinois. And the governor remains utterly terrified that he will be blamed for any surge of infections and deaths that might follow a massive weekend of celebrations in the Windy City and in the collar counties, especially after a spring-time of people cooped up and eager to get out and socialize. Yeah, it's easy for him to heap blame upon President Trump but Pritzker's thin skin can't take it. He's basically paralyzed with fear. Fear that he will be blamed. Fear that he will look weak and ineffective. One specific event in particular has Pritzker terrified more than any other: the massive fireworks display in Chicago at Navy Pier. Hundreds of thousands gather together, packed closely, to watch the incredible pyrotechnic and laser show. Aside from his fears of catching blame and second-guessing for Chinese flu infections and deaths, Pritzker's secondary fear is that he will look weak if (when) people begin to largely ignore his edicts from on high Pritzker's worried the local businesses will tell government agents trying to implement business closures and other regulations to go pound sand. Because under Illinois' Department of Health Act (20 ILCS 2305), while the Illinois Department of Public Health may shut down a non-compliant business, they must get a court hearing within 48-hours or the mandatory closure loses its force of law and government officials must then rely on "voluntary" cooperation. And at this point, without a court order, the business owner may re-open with impunity. And stay open. And even if the local health authorities go to court, they're going to run up against local judges, elected by (and held accountable to) local people. Odds are under Equal Protection arguments and others, it will prove a tough sell for government to force closure of one business when others doing similar work under similar circumstances are allowed to remain open. (Construction as an example… construction for government projects continues apace while private construction is supposed to be idled to protect against Wuflu infections). In addition to fear that businesses and everyday people will begin to ignore his "orders," Pritzker's worried about sheriffs, police chiefs and local units of government publicly refusing to enforce them. This is why Mr. Multi-billionaire Governor came completely unglued when he heard about the Clay County court that sided with Rep. Darren Bailey in ruling Pritzker over-stepped his authority. His Royal Highness doesn't like it when some rural county jurist tells the world that the Emporer has no clothes..." </> |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 30 10:58PM -0700 Leo wrote: > How's that sap that runs your tiny population country doing? He's a > dandy with a pedigree, I'll give him that. What were his other > qualifications? Did you vote for him? If so, why? Lol, Leo...I'd describe Boy Prince Justin as a witless "fop" - and I am being *somewhat* charitable, even... <chuckle> -- Best Greg |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: May 01 12:31AM -0700 On 2020 Apr 30, , Bruce wrote > He ceded power? Didn't the governors always have that power? And > didn't everybody know that, except Trump? Correct me if I'm wrong. I'm > not American, you know. Imprecise language on my part. Every governor would like him to be the final word. Every congressman would too. Not one Democrat would object if he did. One person to blame is safer than a thousand. He didn't fall for it. Meanwhile, he implemented the Defense Production Act for ventilators which were deemed vital in early March, desperately needed, and practically nonexistent for the coming crisis. <https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/memorandum-order-defense- production-act-regarding-purchase-ventilators/> Now we supply them to countries that need them. We have a glut, because so-called sophisticated computer models didn't prognosticate sh*t. They are pretty much like sophisticated climate change models that don't prognosticate sh*t. You just gotta believe! I seem to be using the word sh*t a lot lately. I wonder what it means? leo |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: May 01 12:46AM -0700 Leo wrote: > final word. Every congressman would too. Not one Democrat would object if > he did. One person to blame is safer than a thousand. He didn't fall for > it. In this case, he is a brilliant strategist... > are pretty much like sophisticated climate change models that don't > prognosticate sh*t. You just gotta believe! > I seem to be using the word sh*t a lot lately. I wonder what it means? History will one day judge that this whole extended lockdown thing as one of the biggest goofs in history, along the lines of Hitler invading the USSR or Marie Antoinette's "Let them eat cake" utterance... -- Best Greg |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: May 01 12:00AM -0700 "Leo" <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote in message news:0001HW.245B99AB000678BE70000F0B938F@News.Individual.Net... > direct question, and he will blue-sky a thought. A politician can't or > won't do that by their very nature. I find him extraordinarily refreshing. > Most here are horrified. I get it. I agree with you! |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: May 01 12:45AM -0700 On 2020 May 1, , Julie Bove wrote > I agree with you! Thanks, Julie! My political positions are generally and vociferously unpopular. Hunker down. leo |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 01 12:29AM -0700 > > > be a fundamentalist Jew to care about kosher. And you eat pork... > > Uncle thinks the world is the same as his experience in his little hamlet in the middle of nowheresville. As far as pork goes, a lot of cultures considers pork to be a dirty meat. > Well said! He also forgets that Gentile consumers account for 70% of the $6B worth of Kosher foods sold each year in the US. It has very little to do with religion, and everything to do with common sense and civility. Why did Ballpark once release their own line of Kosher franks? And if he lives in a fly-over state, they may have to FedEx in that converted yellow-bellied heathen sucker. ehe "Hey Verne, I think we gots (eh) us here our first live Jew. He wants to know what aisle Hebrew National is in. Hebrew who?" eheee -D, "I wish there was some award for the Myriad nameless Jewish immigrants - our parents & grandparents who never attained celebrity but who have a substantial part of the bone and flesh and robust spirit of our community" - DAVID SARNOFF, communications pioneer who paved the way for the establishment of National radio & tv networks, and started the first radio network, National Broadcasting Company (NBC) in 1926, NYC.."I'm not a Jew, I'm Jewish - I don't go the whole hog" eh - JONATHAN MILLER, YIDDISH-BRITISH comedian, BEYOND THE FRINGE WITH PETER COOK.."I believe that eating pork makes people stupid" - eh DAVID STEINBERG, comedian, Canuckian-Jew "We answer to a higher authority" is a pretty righteous tagline. "Righteous" in the 70's slang meaning "awesome." But it's also righteous in a non-secular, divine, sense. As far as David Sarnoff goes, God bless him! |
| S Viemeister <firstname@lastname.oc.ku>: May 01 08:11AM +0100 On 5/1/2020 6:24 AM, Sqwertz wrote: > and appointed his wife the only moderator? (Vili has washed his > hands of us). > It was quite a coup. NOW it's a real cooking group. It was petty and stupid. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: May 01 12:26AM -0700 S Viemeister wrote: > > hands of us). > > It was quite a coup. NOW it's a real cooking group. > It was petty and stupid. For a *little* man like Steve it is a "huge" accomplishment... -- Best Greg |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: May 01 12:03AM -0700 "Gary" <g.majors@att.net> wrote in message news:5EAAC56A.DB0B838A@att.net... > "TEENAGERS! LEAVE HOME NOW WHILE YOU STILL KNOW EVERYTHING!" > PS - nice though that she donated that money to a > good cause. I feel sorry for her. Her parents admit she has mental problems. They are using her as their puppet. |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: May 01 12:04AM -0700 "Dave Smith" <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca> wrote in message news:fOBqG.91891$eg7.34210@fx33.iad... > time of Paris climate change talks. We sent 300 delegates. Ontario's > premier went back and forth a couple times. They waste money and energy > on stuff like that and then expect the rest of us to take it seriously. She took a ship that left a HUGE carbon footprint. |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: May 01 12:06AM -0700 "Sqwertz" <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid> wrote in message news:jbqhei77thie.dlg@sqwertz.com... > If we Less global warming means the virus would kill even more > people. > Somebody shoot that kid, eh? She's the virus. Hehehe. |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Apr 30 09:54PM -0700 On 2020 Apr 30, , Cindy Hamilton wrote > I suspect it's not the dense people so much as the entrenched health-insurance > industry, which can line a lot of political pockets and buy a lot of > propaganda. Now let's parse that thought. Evil capitalists are feeding money to priestly politicians who accept graft, couched as "donations" for their own political and economic gain. Who are the bad guys here? leo |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: May 01 03:11PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Apr 2020 21:54:21 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >Now let's parse that thought. Evil capitalists are feeding money to >priestly politicians who accept graft, couched as "donations" for their >own political and economic gain. Who are the bad guys here? Wouldn't you say it's a rather sick, divided and polarised society that's only based on money and selfishness? Or is that stating the obvious? |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Apr 30 10:57PM -0700 On 2020 Apr 30, , Bruce wrote > Wouldn't you say it's a rather sick, divided and polarised society > that's only based on money and selfishness? Or is that stating the > obvious? You are really hung up on the money. We are sick, divided and polarized by a division of what's good for themselves by both parties. Bipartisan support for truly major, and good for the people, legislation is nonexistent. Blame both parties. Don't blame President Trump. leo |
| Bruce <bruce@null.null>: May 01 04:01PM +1000 On Thu, 30 Apr 2020 22:57:08 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: >a division of what's good for themselves by both parties. Bipartisan >support for truly major, and good for the people, legislation is >nonexistent. Blame both parties. I do. >Don't blame President Trump. No, not for this. It was like that before Trump and will be like that after. |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: May 01 12:24AM -0500 On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 08:35:13 -0400, Gary wrote: > A few weeks ago, I stated that they were just a bunch of > babies that can't deal with the real world so they all > ran off to the moderated facebook group. You said that about ME!?!?!? > take that back. These are people that want to talk about > food without all the constant bickering bullshit that > consumes over 90% of the posts here. Did you read about how Bob Terwilliger and I ran off all the petty. censoring moderators (5 women, names you'd recognize) last August and appointed his wife the only moderator? (Vili has washed his hands of us). It was quite a coup. NOW it's a real cooking group. -sw |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: May 01 12:26AM -0500 On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 10:16:45 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote: > Good for you. Yesterday seemed to be one of the worst ever with > personal attacks. Sad, really. Damn, I missed it all again. I wasn't there again. I was absent 24th-27th. =sw |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Apr 30 08:46PM -0700 I always read his posts. It dawns on me that there aren't any. This isn't a great time to disappear. leo |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Apr 30 09:07PM -0700 On Thursday, April 30, 2020 at 10:46:31 PM UTC-5, Leo wrote: > I always read his posts. It dawns on me that there aren't any. This > isn't a great time to disappear. > Leo Hmmmmmm, I haven't seen him in a couple days now that you've mentioned it. I hope all is well with him. |
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