- Got my damaged Leaf back! - 5 Updates
- OT: Much more Fun than a Copper Nail - 1 Update
- Where can I find Kimmelweck Rolls? - 3 Updates
- Won't be doing much cooking. - 9 Updates
- Juniper Berries - 2 Updates
- My website got hacked - 1 Update
- Garish kitchen accessory - 1 Update
- I get my 100% electric Nissan Leaf back in a few days! - 1 Update
- Nutrition - 1 Update
- "Full American Breakfast" (for Lunch+Dinner) - 1 Update
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 29 12:36PM -0400 On 7/29/2020 11:38 AM, Janet wrote: > John's car is fitted with ecological planet-saver tyres woven from > kudzu vines by unemployed cannabis nurses. > Janet UK Kudzu! That's a word I haven't heard in a long time. Seems like 'hemp' would be more fitting in his case. Of course we're just poking a little fun right now. ;) Jill |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jul 29 09:48AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 10:00:27 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote: > Cindy Hamilton > === > scofflaw ?? It's just what it sounds like. Someone who scoffs at laws. Cindy Hamilton |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jul 29 10:02AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 1:40:06 AM UTC-10, Gary wrote: > the car and it being totaled. Also insurance company > (Nationwide) had a "First time forgiveness" policy so > my car insurance price never went up. My daughter totaled our Hyundai too. I was shocked to get a check for $12,500. We only made $2500 on that accident but we got a lot of joy out of the time we spent with it so it was well worth it. Now we drive junkers that's not much fun or joy. That's the brakes. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jul 29 02:10PM -0400 On Wed, 29 Jul 2020 11:11:11 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >I'm sure the mechanics who worked on it are laughing all the way to the >bank. >Jill As soon as the mechanics see he has no insurance they will know that no one will check on the quality of their work and Kootchie will get a lousy over priced job. Kootchie is a dumb ass because he grew up a spoiled bastard who thinks inheritence is earnings. The Kootch never earned a cent in his life. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jul 29 11:50AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 5:05:02 AM UTC-5, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > Missouri requires that accidents be reported to the police within 30 days. > John is a scofflaw in this as he is in so many things. > Cindy Hamilton I handled it myself, so fuck off! John Kuthe... |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 29 02:50PM -0400 A young hawk! https://i.postimg.cc/SKh8y3HN/young-hawk.jpg Jill |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jul 29 02:15PM -0400 On Wed, 29 Jul 2020 10:31:35 -0400, Dave Smith >> cause for doing so. >If you lived in that area you probably know that Kimmelwick is a local >specialty and virtually unavailable outside of western NY. Kimmel is caraway, refers to anything containg |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jul 29 02:39PM -0400 On Wed, 29 Jul 2020 Dave Smith wrote: >> cause for doing so. >If you lived in that area you probably know that Kimmelwick is a local >specialty and virtually unavailable outside of western NY. Kimmel refers to carraway seed, there's even Kimmel Liquer made with carraway, very helpful for sore throat. There are many ethnic breads that contain carraway. There's nothing special about kimmelweck, it's a bread that's popular all over, especially Russia and eastern Europe... what do yoose think Jewish rye bread with carraway seeds is? |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jul 29 02:47PM -0400 On Wed, 29 Jul 2020 10:31:35 -0400, Dave Smith >> cause for doing so. >If you lived in that area you probably know that Kimmelwick is a local >specialty and virtually unavailable outside of western NY. Kimmelwick is available throughout Russia and eastern Europe. Jewish Rye bread is kimmelwick. Kimmel refers to carroway. |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jul 29 09:47AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 11:09:57 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote: > unless it's a life threatening emergency. > ==== > I didn't know that and I am very pleased to hear it!! And then everybody else who uses that hospital pays for the ER visit. And everybody else who uses that ambulance company pays for the ambulance ride. Some of those ER visits are for problems a general practitioner could deal with, and some of them are for problems that result from an untreated chronic condition (like diabetes) turning into an acute emergency. Cindy Hamilton |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Jul 29 10:04AM -0700 Cindy Hamilton wrote: > could deal with, and some of them are for problems that result from > an untreated chronic condition (like diabetes) turning into an > acute emergency. Or in the case of Chicago, inner - city gunshot victims...this is why so many inner - city ER's have closed, it is a huge cost: https://heyjackass.com/ 'Chicago 2020 Year to Date Shot & Killed: 404 Shot & Wounded: 1875 Total Shot: 2279 Total Homicides: 442...' -- Best Greg |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jul 29 10:21AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 6:47:09 AM UTC-10, Cindy Hamilton wrote: > an untreated chronic condition (like diabetes) turning into an > acute emergency. > Cindy Hamilton A lot of poor folk use the ER as their primary medical care. I get to have checkup for monitoring my diabetes and schedule dental work and purchase meds. For poor folks, that's an unthinkable luxury. That sucks. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 29 01:22PM -0400 On 7/29/2020 11:09 AM, Sheldon Martin wrote: > Depends which soup. > The low calorie ones are terrible, watery and tasteless. > The rich and hearty ones are excellent. All low calorie canned soups are terrible. So are canned low sodium soups. The last time I bought "rich & hearty" Progresso soup it was clam chowder and it turned out to be thin, watery and pretty much tasteless. And yes, I've tried their rich and hearty canned wild rice soup with chicken and it was a huge disappointment. I can make wild rice soup with chicken stock and oh boy, cooked wild rice with cream that tastes so much better. > very good turned into eggdrop... very thick with a rich tomato flavor, Sorry, but I do not want tomatoey egg drop soup. Not saying you can't drop an egg in Progresso chunky tomato soup and enjoy it but it's not at all traditional. Jill |
| bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Jul 29 10:23AM -0700 But car accidents are worse in Chicago !! "Every day in Illinois ..835 fatal car crashes resulting in the deaths of 918 people. That's more than two people killed every day of the year in vehicle accidents. 84,172 people injured in Illinois car crashes. Salvi Law › facts-figures Car Crash Statistics & Accident Facts in Illinois - Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard PC 918 people dead in car crashes is a worse problem than 404 dead from gang fightings. |
| Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Jul 29 01:44PM -0400 On Wed, 29 Jul 2020 Ophelia wrote: >you drive yourself there, you might sit and wait for hours >unless it's a life threatening emergency. > I didn't know that and I am very pleased to hear it!! In the US an ambulance may not be covered, if an emergency from say an auto wreck and the police call the ambulance will bring you to the hospital and they will work out payment later. If one has medical insurance most cover for ambulance. Without medical coverage one is at the mercy of the system, you'll get ER care but not one's choice of doctor and not immediate care either, you'll wait your turn... you can be laying on a gurney in a hallway for several hours.... they treat those with insurance first. I wouldn't want to need medical care without having medical insurance. When I recently needed cateract surgery since that's an elective I was able to have the best eye surgeon in the county and was treated rightaway, and my aftercare was superb. I'd not want to need cataract surgery and have no insurance. I have a good insurance plan but I still had to pay $2,400 for the special astigmatism lenses and to have them inserted. With the special lenses inserted I no longer need to wear glasses. I only need to very occasionally use readers, cheapies from the 99¢ store. At first I bought readers from Walgreens for $30, they fell apart the first time I used them, brought them back and got a credit on my Visa. The 99¢ cheapies work great, in fact I bought two pair, one for my computer desk, one for the bedroom to read the TV guide thingie from Dish. Since the cateract surgery I don't ever remember having such good vision, anyone with cataracts shouldn't wait, have it done rightaway, I should have had it done five years ago... since my surgery I can see lady parts through their clothes... not that I ever needed to see their bra label to know their size. ;) |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jul 29 12:14PM -0600 On 2020-07-29 6:56 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote: > from national health insurance and even more who might not, hate the > idea of paying for part of someone else's health insurance. > Cindy Hamilton But they are not! They are paying into a pool just like when they pay car and house insurance. |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jul 29 02:33PM -0400 > Salvi Law › facts-figures > Car Crash Statistics & Accident Facts in Illinois - Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard PC > 918 people dead in car crashes is a worse problem than 404 dead from gang fightings. Car crash victims are more likely covered by insurance. Maybe you can get the shooters to run over their victims instead of shooting them. |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jul 29 02:37PM -0400 On 7/29/2020 2:14 PM, graham wrote: >> Cindy Hamilton > But they are not! They are paying into a pool just like when they pay > car and house insurance. Stop it! Do no inject common sense into healthcare discussions |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Jul 29 12:29PM -0400 > We use fresh picked Juniper Berries along with CB Brandy and additional spices to marinate a lamb roast for 48 hours - then onto the rotisserie - best roast I have ever eaten. Juniper is fine if you like the taste of gin. I'm not really a fan of juniper. Seems like it might be a bit overwhelming for lamb. But hey, as long as you liked it. :) Jill |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jul 29 02:24PM -0400 On 7/29/2020 12:29 PM, jmcquown wrote: > juniper. Seems like it might be a bit overwhelming for lamb. But hey, > as long as you liked it. :) > Jill I like gin so it sounds good to me. I'd take a bit to try it. |
| Don Wiss <donwiss@no_spam.com>: Jul 29 01:32PM -0400 >able to piggyback hizzhoners.com nameservice to keep your domain >name cheaply. She has plenty of space and bandwidth she probably >doesn't use. This is your best bet. Email her! I would think all hosts these days now allow unlimited domains in one hosting account. And unlimited bandwidth. Mine always has. No reason not to keep the original domain name. Since archive.org can be rather slow. Best to go directly to that last save of the site. http://web.archive.org/web/20200516172838/http://hizzoners.com/ Don. http://paleofood.com/ (e-mail at page bottom). |
| Leo <leoblaisdell@sbcglobal.net>: Jul 29 10:31AM -0700 On 2020 Jul 28, , sockmonkeyNH@comcast.net wrote > I love it! It looks like a sewing machine cover I made a while back. Did she > use a pattern? She did. It was "Kitchenaid Mixer Cover" from AFateSoTwisted. It was a YouTube tutorial. I failed to mention that the cover is reversible with a Christmas theme inside. leo |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jul 29 10:16AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 2:55:45 AM UTC-10, Gary wrote: > It took about 3-4 hours to do with the smelly push mower. > All for $1.00 a week. Dad got a very good deal. Just the > easy garbage thing was worth that much. I don't recall if I ever got an allowance. My dad did, however. Back in the old days, my dad would give his paycheck to my mom who took care of the payments and the family budget. My dad would get a few buck to spend as he wished. It's an old-school Asian arrangement. My guess is that some European cultures did that too. These days, in America, anything goes and the family paycheck gets blown all over the damn place. |
| bruce2bowser@gmail.com: Jul 29 09:54AM -0700 On 5/18/19 at 3:16AM UTC-10, Gary wrote: > and turned them into lemonade. > Much of southern food now originated with the slave era and imo > is some pretty damn good food too. But, having trouble fitting-in and being marginalized caused southern free blacks and slaves to sometimes have different eating habits all together. Slave-like conditions were also with blacks elsewhere outside of the south, even on the other side of the Atlantic. |
| Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jul 29 09:42AM -0700 On Wednesday, July 29, 2020 at 10:24:03 AM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote: > >> ate pancakes. > I never eat pancakes, what an awful food, just an excuse to suck up > calorie rich toppings. Mmmm. Butter and syrup. Bring it on! Cindy Hamilton |
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