Monday, June 17, 2019

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 8 topics

Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jun 17 02:20PM -0500

>>the women come from:
>>https://blog.mindvalley.com/men-are-from-mars-women-are-from-venus/
 
> Mars Bars are good, and now coated with dark chocolate.
 
Dark Chocolate is for girls.
 
-sw
lucretiaborgia@fl.it: Jun 17 04:20PM -0300

>even considered moving to another country. We don't need to make
>america great again. It's never stopped being great. That quote
>from TRump was just political nonsense as always.
 
Wow that last sentence amazes me, thought you felt he was wonderful!
In actuality he has the rest of the world laughing at the US now and a
crash is definitely coming.
Sqwertz <sqwertzme@gmail.invalid>: Jun 17 02:26PM -0500

> 2040. But almost every big motor manufacturer producing electric cars
> buys its cobalt from Congo - where 40,000 children (some just 4 years
> of age) work in a polluted hell on earth of the cobalt mines."
 
On the plus side, there will soon be a glut of lithium (and cobalt),
so John can afford to take some of that.
 
-sw
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Jun 18 05:29AM +1000


>Wow that last sentence amazes me, thought you felt he was wonderful!
>In actuality he has the rest of the world laughing at the US now and a
>crash is definitely coming.
 
I wonder if all these tariffs are going to cause an economic crisis.
Now India and China have retaliated and placed tariffs on American
products. In the end, everybody always loses with these protectionist
power games.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 17 03:59PM -0400

On 6/17/2019 3:26 PM, Sqwertz wrote:
 
> On the plus side, there will soon be a glut of lithium (and cobalt),
> so John can afford to take some of that.
 
> -sw
 
It may be possible to build all electrics, but there are many problems
to solve along the way. For a single family home it is easy to put in a
charging station. In many places with on the street parking for
multi=story apartment building, it is more complicated. I can see
walking down the street and dozens of extension cords running to the
cars. There will be many lawsuits from people tripping on extension
cords. We'll need more lawyers!
 
I don't know how it will affect the power grid. For years there have
been programs to reduce use and not build new plants, suddenly we will
increase the use considerably.
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Jun 18 06:03AM +1000


>I don't know how it will affect the power grid. For years there have
>been programs to reduce use and not build new plants, suddenly we will
>increase the use considerably.
 
The change might be gradual enough for the system to slowly adapt and
expand where necessary. We're not getting rid of our petrol/gas car
and diesel car until the end of their lifecycles, for instance.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 01:50PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 9:59:12 AM UTC-10, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
 
> I don't know how it will affect the power grid. For years there have
> been programs to reduce use and not build new plants, suddenly we will
> increase the use considerably.
 
People seeing roadblocks instead of possibilities have been around always. What I can't understand is how people that know our history can say that it's too difficult a problem to solve. Building a national highway system from scratch is obviously too difficult a problem to solve but that didn't stop us. The electric car and infrastructure is not anywhere near that problematic. We already have most of the system in place.
 
As far as power cables and extension cords go, it's fairly obvious that wired charging is not the way to go. Cables are just an interim technology.
jay <jay@mail.com>: Jun 17 02:37PM -0600

On 6/16/19 2:57 PM, jmcquown wrote:
> A pan fried cod fillet with yellow squash on the side.  Simple yet tasty.
 
> What's on your menu?
 
> Jill
Sounds good! I love the fish meals. Fixed Halibut cheeks yesterday
with pasta side and a salad. Today it's Texas Twinkies and slaw.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 12:29PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 12:23:09 AM UTC-10, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> still in use in the aviation industry. I recently wrote a small program
> in Fortran, typing it in just like C or any other language.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
I wasn't blaming Fortran for anything. A lot of people cut their teeth on Fortran IV. It's the experience of learning it in college that sucked.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 12:48PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 12:26:09 AM UTC-10, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> 80-column line for Usenet posts because not everybody's newsreader wraps
> long lines. It's common courtesy.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
In the year 2019, I prefer to not force carriage returns. That's common sense. What the hell kind of newsreader refuses to display text properly? People need to upgrade their newsreaders or learn to live with their limitations instead of expecting other people to solve their problems.
 
My guess is that you should be doing a CR at 72 characters instead of 80 - but who's counting? :)
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Jun 18 05:52AM +1000

On Mon, 17 Jun 2019 12:48:09 -0700 (PDT), dsi1
>> long lines. It's common courtesy.
 
>> Cindy Hamilton
 
>In the year 2019, I prefer to not force carriage returns. That's common sense. What the hell kind of newsreader refuses to display text properly? People need to upgrade their newsreaders or learn to live with their limitations instead of expecting other people to solve their problems.
 
Everybody's wrong and dsi1 is right. There's the rebelling adolescent
for you! :)
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 01:06PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 1:48:14 AM UTC-10, Gary wrote:
> word wrap. No worries.
 
> Notice above...there I go hitting return again. Bad habit and
> hard to break.
 
I have no problem with people being true to their NNTP school. Anybody over the age of 60 might want to do that. However, you're just going to have to live with us young folks and our ways because we're the future. Feel free to do things the old fashioned ways. I think it's quaint and kinda cute.
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16LEElK1HhM
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Jun 17 01:12PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 4:06:36 PM UTC-4, dsi1 wrote:
> > hard to break.
 
> I have no problem with people being true to their NNTP school. Anybody over the age of 60 might want to do that. However, you're just going to have to live with us young folks and our ways because we're the future. Feel free to do things the old fashioned ways. I think it's quaint and kinda cute.
 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16LEElK1HhM
 
Young folks don't use Usenet.
 
Cindy Hamilton
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 01:37PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 10:12:58 AM UTC-10, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16LEElK1HhM
 
> Young folks don't use Usenet.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Well, that's true. :)
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 12:26PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 6:20:05 AM UTC-10, tert in seattle wrote:
 
> I called my dad - he loves to talk on the phone
 
> one of my kids asked why there isn't Kids' Day and I told him every
> day is kids day so we got that taken care of for this year
 
We got kid's days on this pebble. It's 3/3 for girls and 5/5 for boys. My son was born on May 5th. That makes him an extra lucky boy.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Jun 17 08:12PM


> Awww why would he not be disappointed if his son didn't call him on
> Father's day:( I can understand that.
 
> Oh and why would he call his son on that special day?
 
I'll play unpopular devil's advocate here. If our adult children refuse to
acknowledge us as parents on a day set aside for such an "honor", what does
that say about us as a parent? Perhaps the problem isn't the wayward child
but the wayward parent, in which case, I should hope that "disappointed"
parent takes a moment to reflect on the situation, and how to change that
situation going forward. Biology alone doesn't make a parent. It's a
harsh statement, but oftentimes the truth.
dsi1 <dsi123@hawaiiantel.net>: Jun 17 01:35PM -0700

On Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 12:03:17 PM UTC-10, Dave Smith wrote:
> them and care for them.
 
> He is now 41, has found work that he enjoys and that pays well. He has
> a wonderful girlfriend. He calls regularly
 
My dad always had his tales about his travels. I always admired that about him. He was also one of those silver-tongued devils and could get people to see things his way and get himself out of fixes. The Army knew this and sent him all over the Pacific to procure materials and supplies. Yesterday, at lunch, he said that when he got his pinsetter friend at the bowling alley to knock down pins from behind. Beats me how that works.
 
My wife always says "I love you" when talking to her brothers or sister. My guess is that white folks say that a lot. I find it kind of amusing. It's my secret little amusement. Asians don't say that kind of stuff. We also don't say stuff like "I enjoy breathing air" or "gravity - it's great!"
Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Jun 18 06:35AM +1000

On Mon, 17 Jun 2019 20:12:57 -0000 (UTC), Jinx the Minx
>parent takes a moment to reflect on the situation, and how to change that
>situation going forward. Biology alone doesn't make a parent. It's a
>harsh statement, but oftentimes the truth.
 
There are also shitty children. And then there are children who just
don't care about a commercially hyped retail event like "Father's
Day".
Thomas <canope234@gmail.com>: Jun 17 01:31PM -0700

That is getting aged. Carefull.
Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org>: Jun 17 02:55PM -0500

Ed Pawlowski wrote:
 
> No need for paper. AI bought a brass bristled brush for cleaning the
> grill grates. I think it would work well to replace TP. Just rinse
> it out. Save the trees!
 
Yoose better check with Popeye to see what brand and model number he
uses :)
Thomas <canope234@gmail.com>: Jun 17 01:23PM -0700

I buy scott comfort plus from amazon. I want to pay under 50 cents a roll. They deliver for under that 50. 30 rolls for 12 bucks ish? Says equals 60 rolls. BS ad.
A Moose in Love <parkstreetbooboo@gmail.com>: Jun 17 01:21PM -0700

On Monday, June 17, 2019 at 12:28:29 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> himself to return fire. The fact remains that, if he was in the Waffen
> SS, as you said, he was a member of a Nazi organization. You had to be a
> Nazi to get into it.
 
you're a liar.
 
> > overnight.
 
> There was conscription into the Wehrmacht. The Waffen SS was manned by
> volunteers. In the early days it was open only to ethnic Germans.
 
the waffen ss was not manned by only volunteers. you haven't even bothered to check your work. you lie, and lie, and lie. you're a fraud as is your old man.
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 17 03:35PM -0400

On 6/17/2019 1:44 PM, Terry Coombs wrote:
>>            ~Toidi Uoy
 
>   You walked in with an attitude and a chip on your shoulder . Not a
> good way to start .
 
A cry for attention.
Terry Coombs <snag_one@msn.com>: Jun 17 03:04PM -0500

On 6/17/2019 1:25 PM, Bruce wrote:
>>> He hasn't called me names yet, which can't be said of you.
>>   Wah wah wah , whiny little bitch .
> It strikes me that you have "an attitude and a chip on your shoulder".
 
  Nah , I just like to yank your oh-so-yankable chain . And you can't
stop yourself from responding , just like a good little puppet .
 
--
Snag
Yes , I'm old
and crochety - and armed .
Get outta my woods !
Thomas <canope234@gmail.com>: Jun 17 01:12PM -0700

I am with Sheldon on the Decant.
Other than that I have never said Christ in vain.
I enjoy your posts and have no religious affiliations.
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