- Summary Hot/Sour Soup - 8 Updates
- Sporty Susan - 1 Update
- OT: Nashville Shooter, A Tranny FREAK, Kills SIX :-( - 5 Updates
- The Not-So-Great Depression Diet [1930's Food History] - 3 Updates
- OT: "Give Us A CHEAP/BASIC Car...!!!" [ Michael Trew ] - 7 Updates
- Need a ladle? - 1 Update
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 01 04:58PM -0700 Hank Rogers wrote: > diatribes about white people, the mainland, etc. > On the other hand uncle, few would recognize you if you were not > angry. It is your trademark. I thought that a condition of Tojo's Presidential Pardon from execution back in 1948 was that he always "be happy"... I'll have to forward these angry posts of his to President Truman for "review"... And Princess Jill can do her "good deed" by forwarding them to the FBI... -- GM |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 01 05:02PM -0700 Hank Rogers wrote: > dsi1 wrote: > > My point is that Asian cooking ... blah blah blah, da rock, blah blah blah ... White ... asian ... blah blah blah ... > Yoose really fucked up in the head Tojo. Hey, it's Saturday afternoon, maybe Unca is at the beach downing a few Zombies... He may be suffering a "SUGAR RUSH"...!!! Zombie: The Zombie is a Tiki cocktail made of fruit juices, liqueurs, and various rums. It first appeared in late 1934, invented by Donn Beach at his Hollywood Don the Beachcomber restaurant. It was popularized on the East coast soon afterwards at the 1939 New York World's Fair... The Zombie is a behemoth of a drink that features three different rums—Jamaican, Puerto Rican and 151-proof—along with fresh lime juice, falernum, grenadine, a few drops of anise-flavored liqueur and Donn's mix, which is essentially a cinnamon simple syrup mixed with fresh grapefruit juice. </> |
| % <persent@nomail.net>: Apr 01 08:12PM -0400 Bruce wrote: > Prey on Americans? Lettuce prey. |
| % <persent@nomail.net>: Apr 01 08:14PM -0400 jmcquown wrote: > loaded with sugar. Janet's post about diabetes is particularly relevant: > https://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=4&lvlid=78 > Jill Did Dave tell you about him trashing while wearing his Barney badge, princess? |
| % <persent@nomail.net>: Apr 01 08:20PM -0400 Bruce wrote: >> your night ridiculing Americans. That's the best >> you can do with your time? smh > I don't do that. Bullshit, that's all you do in here. > Youse do that youseselves. Not all of youse, just a > large minority or a small majority. Your next presidential election > will update us on that. So "youse" is your go to word in here now, and the USA elections are something that you're tracking closely. Ok, nuff said. <gavel bang> |
| Ed P <esp@snet.xxx>: Apr 01 08:32PM -0400 On 4/1/2023 6:34 PM, Bruce wrote: >>> Says Expert Cindy, who never makes bread. >> Hey, she doesn't see your poasts, or mine. > What matters is that I write it, not that she reads it. Wow, powerful thought. Profound statement |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 02 10:36AM +1000 >Bruce wrote: >> Prey on Americans? >Lettuce prey. Sanctuary much. |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 02 10:36AM +1000 >>> Hey, she doesn't see your poasts, or mine. >> What matters is that I write it, not that she reads it. >Wow, powerful thought. Profound statement Only a couple of times a year, unfortunately. |
| Ed P <esp@snet.xxx>: Apr 01 08:35PM -0400 If you are a sports fan or binge watch movies, you need this for proper nourishment and not miss a scene or play https://imgur.com/gallery/qpKNV8H |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 01 05:16PM -0700 Hank Rogers wrote: > his pen. > Look around you man. You ain't in Connecticut any more. You're in a > totalitarian state. Keep your mouth shut if you want to survive. Should we set Ed up in a "blind date" with Stormy Daniels, Hank...??? <chuckle> -- GM |
| lucretia@florence.it: Apr 01 09:18PM -0300 On Sat, 1 Apr 2023 14:31:41 -0700 (PDT), Thomas Joseph >> has, by far, the largest number of gun deaths in the western world. Of >> course, there are people who believe that 2 + 2 isn't 4. >One way or another everyone dies. True, but it's very sad to die when you are only 9 and violently! |
| lucretia@florence.it: Apr 01 09:19PM -0300 On Sun, 02 Apr 2023 08:32:50 +1000, Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid> wrote: >>> drag shows. Perhaps they should ban churches instead. >>Certainly tax them!! >America's slowly going the way of the Taliban. Pretty much! |
| % <persent@nomail.net>: Apr 01 08:25PM -0400 Bruce wrote: > America's slowly going the way of the Taliban. Poor Aussie feller has a penis envy. |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 02 10:35AM +1000 >Bruce wrote: >> America's slowly going the way of the Taliban. >Poor Aussie feller has a penis envy. Hey, you said you didn't care if I criticised the US. |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 02 09:58AM +1000 On Sun, 2 Apr 2023 00:37:36 +0100, S Viemeister >didn't bother to let the landlord know. >My daughter's flat has a laundry room upstairs, with coin-operated >machines, shared by five tenants. I'd wouldn't like that. Even the smallest apartments I've seen in the Netherlands, at least, had a washing machine. |
| jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net>: Apr 01 08:27PM -0400 On 4/1/2023 7:37 PM, S Viemeister wrote: > didn't bother to let the landlord know. > My daughter's flat has a laundry room upstairs, with coin-operated > machines, shared by five tenants. Thank you for pointing that out. Not everything Bruce infers as a negative is "American". I lived in a small apartment building when I was in my 20's that did not have a washer or dryer in the unit. No coin-operated laundry room on the premises for the tenants, either. I took my clothes to a coin-operated laundry down the street and sat and waited for them to wash & dry. After that, I insisted on finding a place that included a washer/dryer. At one apartment it was one of those stackable washer/dryer units. It was in the kitchen (and avocado green! but so were the other appliances) but hey, it worked. :) Jill |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 02 10:35AM +1000 On Sat, 1 Apr 2023 20:27:21 -0400, jmcquown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote: >> machines, shared by five tenants. >Thank you for pointing that out. Not everything Bruce infers as a >negative is "American". So far we have American and Scottish. But maybe the list is much longer. |
| Bruce <Bruce@invalid.invalid>: Apr 02 10:00AM +1000 On Sat, 1 Apr 2023 16:38:57 -0700 (PDT), dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net> wrote: >> safety hazard. >I'll bet you'd like something like this. I sure would. Of course, if you hit anything, the odds of being crippled or killed are higher than a being in fancy, schmancy, modern car i.e., the entire vehicle is a safety hazard. I think the wheels are totally boss! >https://photos.app.goo.gl/kxY4pUAzFurL7zrZ9 That looks like my car. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 01 05:06PM -0700 dsi1 wrote: > > safety hazard. > I'll bet you'd like something like this. I sure would. Of course, if you hit anything, the odds of being crippled or killed are higher than a being in fancy, schmancy, modern car i.e., the entire vehicle is a safety hazard. I think the wheels are totally boss! > https://photos.app.goo.gl/kxY4pUAzFurL7zrZ9 Isn't that the Pilipino "tuk - tuk" kind of vehical that Honolulu Rapid Transit uses, instead of modern buses...??? -- GM |
| Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Apr 01 05:07PM -0700 > Lots of new cars have the separate temperature controls for passengers > as well as the butt warmers. Mine does. It also has USB ports for the > rear passengers. We've never bought the sort of car that had butt warmers. The Infiniti belonged to my son, and when he moved to Mexico, he sold it to us. My name was already on the title, so we just took over the payments, though within a couple of months we just paid it off. It's nice, but it sucks down premium gas; it costs twice as much in gas per mile as our Chevy Spark, which doesn't even have power windows, much less butt warmers. --Bryan |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 01 05:19PM -0700 On Saturday, April 1, 2023 at 2:00:43 PM UTC-10, Bruce wrote: > That looks like my car. That truck is owned by our resident manager, or the condo association. Actually, I don't know who owns that that. It looks like a lot of fun. That gas tank on the side insures a quick, somewhat painful, death if you get T-boned. Also your survivors won't have to spent any extra money to have you cremated. All they'll have to do is transfer your ashes to a little box using a small whisk broom. Super convenient! https://japanesenostalgiccar.com/grand-touring-new-use-for-a-toyota-hiace/ |
| dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Apr 01 05:26PM -0700 On Saturday, April 1, 2023 at 2:07:28 PM UTC-10, Bryan Simmons wrote: > our Chevy Spark, which doesn't even have power windows, > much less butt warmers. > --Bryan That Infiniti is a pretty awesome car. I would like to get a car like that or a Lexus one day. My ass needs a comfortable ride. My dentist had a G35 coupe - it was totally boss. He gave it to his son when he got his driver's license. That's not so good, I think. |
| Ed P <esp@snet.xxx>: Apr 01 08:28PM -0400 > Lots of new cars have the separate temperature controls for passengers > as well as the butt warmers. Mine does. It also has USB ports for the > rear passengers. In my younger years I had plenty of cheap basic cars. They served the main purpose of transportation. Life changed, worked had, now have lots of goodies and like the comfort of them, especially on a long trip. Not only butt warmers, but cooled too. Nice in a hot climate. |
| GM <gregorymorrowchicago07@gmail.com>: Apr 01 05:30PM -0700 Bryan Simmons wrote: > premium gas; it costs twice as much in gas per mile as > our Chevy Spark, which doesn't even have power windows, > much less butt warmers. Fred Flintstone got it right: https://www.curbsideclassic.com/uncategorized/cc-tv-cars-of-the-flintstones/#more-469375 Fred's car is The Flintstone's main automotive star. In a lot of ways the simplest of all, being just a 'roller.' For carmakers to get buyers to pay hard cash for feet-propelled-vehicles (not even pedals!), shows those were much simpler times. Yet, we can assume that to offer a seat and a canopy was an enticing enough 'sales pitch.'... On the other hand, the technology used on those ancient wheel bearings has never been surpassed; once in motion, that boy rolled nonstop! Miles and miles of kinetic energy used in the most efficient of ways... There were additional pluses to Fred's basic machine; as episodes progressed, a novel 'modular' capability was revealed. There's no mention ever as to how complex these conversions were, but Fred's car could switch from two to four seater, and to roadster as well. The dashboard would also switch from wood to stone, but it's hard to tell if they were replaced due to wear, or were updates รก la Fiero... In recent times a few cynics have pointed out to the similarities between The Flintstones and The Honeymooners, a mid '50s comedy show starring Jackie Gleason. Oddly, it's another series about pals sneaking around their spouses to get into some convoluted scheme or another, always ending in hijinks. That after centuries such similarities can be found in both shows is only proof that regardless of lifestyle, human behavior is a constant...' </> |
| Bryan Simmons <bryangsimmons@gmail.com>: Apr 01 05:19PM -0700 > > --Bryan > I put down a rubber mat to block weeds about 4-5 year ago and rubber mulch > from Home Depot. Mulch has a 10-year guarantee and still looks great. This is for use with edibles, where we wouldn't want tire rubber. --Bryan |
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