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| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:44AM -0400 Dave Smith wrote: > obligation. They want equal access at all levels..... if they want it, > but few are interested in combat. Since combat is the primary purpose of > the military, they should be assigned there too. One thing I know about the military is this: If an officer plans a military career and hopes to advance to high rank, they need some combat experience in their record. Attending the military academies right after high school damn sure doesn't hurt either. I've always suspected that this is why women in the military wanted to be allowed in combat. To have a chance to advance. |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:45AM -0400 jmcquown wrote: > > You should have heard my Marine father-in-law talk about Bill Clinton. > > Cindy Hamilton > And my father about that "ignorant peanut farmer" (Jimmy Carter). OK then... And my father (career Defense Dept and a lifelong Democrat) about JFK but he was still the "boss." Anyway, the military officers support any current president, more exactly the office that any idiot might be elected to it. Personal opinions aside, he is their Commander in Chief. |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 04 08:48AM -0400 On 2020-05-03 7:54 p.m., Leo wrote: > Black bear: Look for a bear that has glitter on its head and chest. > Grizzly bear: Look for signs of glitter in its scat. > Something like that. There is a similar story about how hikers should wear metal bells on their feet so the noise will scare the bears away. They should also learn to identify bear scat. It is tubular and looks like human crap. Black bears are omnivorous and their scat often has bits of berries and seeds in it. Grizzly scat sometimes has little metal bells in it. |
| U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: May 04 07:33AM -0600 >damn sure doesn't hurt either. >I've always suspected that this is why women in the military >wanted to be allowed in combat. To have a chance to advance. I think you meant to say so that they could have the same opportunities as men? |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 04 09:58AM -0400 On 2020-05-04 9:33 a.m., U.S. Janet B. wrote: >> wanted to be allowed in combat. To have a chance to advance. > I think you meant to say so that they could have the same > opportunities as men? No. I think that he meant what he said... that the way to advancement is to have combat experience. That proven performance in combat has always been a factor in advancement in the military. If women want to have the same advancement opportunities they should have the same experience that men are expected to have. |
| Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: May 04 11:01AM -0300 On Mon, 04 May 2020 07:33:38 -0600, U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com> wrote: >>wanted to be allowed in combat. To have a chance to advance. >I think you meant to say so that they could have the same >opportunities as men? Touché! |
| U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: May 04 08:05AM -0600 On Mon, 4 May 2020 09:58:03 -0400, Dave Smith >been a factor in advancement in the military. If women want to have the >same advancement opportunities they should have the same experience that >men are expected to have. that's what I said. The difference is that your reading of it is skewed by your bias against women |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:45AM -0400 jmcquown wrote: > A bartender or server is never supposed to serve someone who is already > intoxicated. The establishment can be held liable for what happens if > they leave, get in a car and wind up killing someone. To me, that's a very wrong (and newer) law. Way too much responsibility to assign to a bar or a bartender. Many patrons can hold their liquor well and not appear to be drunk. |
| Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: May 04 09:54AM -0400 On 2020-05-04 8:45 a.m., Gary wrote: > to assign to a bar or a bartender. Many patrons can hold their > liquor > well and not appear to be drunk. Don't take this as an anti American rant, but the US has a lot of people...and politicians.. who are opposed to too many laws telling them what they can and can't do, but at the same time they use the courts to litigate and award large sums of money to victims and alleged victims. People can commit minor violations of law for which there may be only a small fine, or maybe not commit any violation at all, and end up being ordered to pay millions in damages. |
| U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: May 04 07:51AM -0600 On Mon, 4 May 2020 02:15:07 -0500, Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid> wrote: >Ooops. It flew away. Never mind. >An app <shaking head>. >-sw No wasps, HORNETS, More aggressive and venomous than their cousin the wasp/ go to the article I linked, click on following blue highlighted sentence "launched an app to quickly report" and there is the app. Janet US |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:45AM -0400 "U.S. Janet B." wrote: > The Majestic Theater was 10 cents (no tax of 1 cent). What were those > boxes of gum drop candies in different colors? I always had to find > someone who would take the licorice ones. I've never cared for any licorice but the black ones were not nice at all. The color and even the taste made me feel like I was chewing on tar. When I was young, my mom would sometimes take us to a theater. It might have even been to get out of the hot house and sit in an air conditioned theater. (?) Don't remember admission prices because mom paid for the tickets. I do remember though that whatever time you went, you could sit in there all day if you wanted to. Miss the first part of the movie and you could stay and watch that when it repeated. They alway started with a newsreel short and also one of those very cool old cartoons (still my favorite ones). |
| U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: May 04 07:43AM -0600 On Sun, 03 May 2020 20:13:23 -0700, Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net> wrote: snip...maybe my boyhood lack of government privilege made me the man I am >The best was "War of the Worlds" with Gene Barry. It's still the best >"War of the Worlds". >leo absolutely right. the remakes are dumb and mad by people who had no understanding of the film. It was the sound effects, the spookiness, not knowing what came next. Janet US |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: May 04 05:50AM -0700 https://stlouis.craigslist.org/roo/d/saint-louis-silvia-looking-for-420/7118225403.html https://stlouis.craigslist.org/roo/d/saint-louis-private-furnished-room-bath/7118225389.html TWO of a kind! ROFL! ;-) John Kuthe... |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: May 04 01:32AM -0700 On 2020 May 4, , dsi1 wrote > 60's. They'd bring my friend and his sister with them and they'd wait in the > car while boozed it up at the nightclub. Parenting was a lot less complicated > back in the old days. I've never eaten that particular type of cake before or since. I'm only guessing that it was rum soaked pound cake with a pineapple bottom. Let's dial back soaked to doused with two or three shots of good rum. leo |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: May 04 04:22AM -0700 On Sunday, May 3, 2020 at 10:33:01 PM UTC-10, Leo wrote: > guessing that it was rum soaked pound cake with a pineapple bottom. Let's > dial back soaked to doused with two or three shots of good rum. > leo That's easy enough to do. Make a pineapple upside down cake. Bake and when done, poke the top with a fork to make many deep holes and pour on the rum. This has to be done fast because that cake has to be turned over without much delay. Alternatively, one could make a pound cake with pineapple in it and soak it with rum. I've made a lot of pound cakes in the past but never made it with pineapple. |
| Janet <nobody@home.org>: May 04 12:35PM +0100 In article <b25983db-5cb2-42f9-a9a8-68f7d7ad2992@googlegroups.com>, dsi123@hawaiiantel.net says... > > leo > That's easy enough to do. Make a pineapple upside down cake. Bake and when done, poke the top with a fork to make many deep holes and pour on the rum. This has to be done fast because that cake has to be turned over without much delay. > Alternatively, one could make a pound cake with pineapple in it and soak it with rum. I've made a lot of pound cakes in the past but never made it with pineapple. I'm beginning to think that making a pineapple upside down cake should be classified as essential work during covid lockdown. Must see if supermarket online home-delivery order will accept pineapple rings and glace cherries as *in stock" Janet UK |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:45AM -0400 Ophelia wrote: > and no icing necessary. > === > Hmm ... OK! What do you suggest I buy? I suggest you just buy whatever sounds good to you. Even making the cake from scratch might be better since you don't mind that. (easy enough to do too) Just make a plain cake mix and add the sliced apple is all I suggested. I used boxed that time. One thing I always do when making the cake batter, no matter what the recipe, add in about 1/3 cup milk in addition to the recommended liquid. It still bakes fine and gives just a bit of extra moisture in the cake. Nobody likes a dry cake. |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:45AM -0400 Dave Smith wrote: > I am not seeing the advantage of a cake mix. And on a very related topic, I always laugh when I see pancake mix in the grocery store. So quick to make a batch from scratch. |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:46AM -0400 dsi1 wrote: > That's easy enough to do. Make a pineapple upside down cake. Bake and when done, poke the top with a fork to make many deep holes and pour on the rum. This has to be done fast because that cake has to be turned over without much delay. I've never turned one over until served. Just use a spatula. |
| Gary <g.majors@att.net>: May 04 08:47AM -0400 Janet wrote: > should be classified as essential work during covid lockdown. > Must see if supermarket online home-delivery order will accept > pineapple rings and glace cherries as *in stock" I've always made pineapple-upside down cakes with crushed pineapples and no cherries. Easy to cut to any size when finished. |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: May 04 03:02AM -0500 On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 08:35:13 -0400, Gary wrote: > 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. So where did you go, Gary? I got up there on stage at our annual Black Tie Gala Ball and announced my sponsorship of you (again, 15 years later) and went to introduce you and there's no Gary there. No Sherwin Williams, no Benjamin Moore, no Pratt or Lambert, and no Dutch Boy either. WTF dude? I got up there and gave a you a head start. Now get your ass up there and don't embarrass me like that again. Or was it all just a lie? -sw |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: May 04 03:22AM -0500 On Sat, 2 May 2020 10:44:36 -0400, jmcquown wrote: >> Didn't Christine have a hand in all the crap over there, too? > I never particpated in the RFC Facebook group but yes, I believe > Christine Dabney was involved. Villi set up the group and admin it for a couple years, then Christine finagled her way in as Admin and appointed all her friends admin and then it went to hell. > Also Damsel. She and crash used to posts there a lot, but drifted off (probably to an asylum). > Have to say I was never > interested in trying to re-form the Cabal (TINC) on a Facebook media > platform. Moderators? No thank you. It's not "moderated". Stop using that excuse. If I can hang there, anybody but John, Greg and maybe Sheldon could. Greg, especially, would not be well received from the getgo. > I met Chris when she was on her way to a job in Virginia. She's nice. > I did think it was odd she travels with everything but the kitchen sink > from job to job, all across the country. My understanding is that she doesn't really cook much, if at all. Just eats (and eats, and eats). She just contemplates cooking. -sw |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: May 04 03:24AM -0500 On Sat, 02 May 2020 11:35:40 -0400, Boron Elgar wrote: > She was a traveling nurse, right? Then needed a go-fund-me or > comparable when she needed hip replacement or had some other med > problem. Some people here raised money for her, and then she bragged about all these cookbook she bought a month or two later. -sw |
| Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: May 04 03:25AM -0500 On Sun, 3 May 2020 09:19:22 -0400, jmcquown wrote: > Yes, a travelling nurse. Temporary assignments all over the US. Her > car was packed to the gills with cookbooks and cooking equipment. Security blankets, mostly. -sw |
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