Liberated food is better than free food because then we have to argue about whether or not it is liberated, instead of whether or not it’s price positively reflects it’s cost.
A few culture warriors walked into a bar. The bartender said if they lay hands on the comedian he’s gonna tell them a joke about authoritarians who kill their own senses of humor and eat it to fuel a zealous quest for control.
Well, my most recent understanding of the relationship between ‘culture warriors’ and rabbis is that if they are with the culture warriors they may have been a rabbi-equivalent of being defrocked.
Though I’d rather let the rabbis come to bar and speak for themselves. It’s kind of fairly obvious if any of them are waging war on any culture. Even more so if they have a few drinks.
We spent Turkey day at the local Hyatt-Regency's $95 buffet. These gonifs charged me $15 for a Maker's Mark at the bar which caused me to try and eat more than $95's worth. Despite a Herculean effort I think I missed the mark.
I only ever had roast Turkey that I enjoyed one time. Instead of being dry, it was juicy, and was darker than off-white in colour. I had to ask if I was really eating Turkey.
Turkey is a remarkably good game bird and tastes heavenly especially when cooked just right. It can't be mistaken for anything else, for example horse meat.
I only ever had roast Turkey that I enjoyed one time. Instead of being dry, it was juicy, and was darker than off-white in colour. I had to ask if I was really eating Turkey.
Strangely, we call the meat that is darker, "dark meat.". It is the same concept as with chicken, if that helps you wrap your head around it.
It's our tradition to have Turkey and Ham for the Xmas dinner, borrowed from the Brits. My dad, god love him, started experimenting after retirement, and now it comes honey glazed with sprinkles of cloves. Sandwiches for days thereafter. The turkey was always meh. Always. Until my brother sourced one locally. But up until the point the turkey and ham had this yin yang thing going on. Some have attempted to divert from tradition and trade the turkey in for duck.
A glass of wine to boot. Red, please.. Good times.
Until the alcohol kicks in and we begin to play poker. 5 card draw was our game. At some point my family was introduced to Texas Holdem, and it all went awry ever since; coincidentally or not.
Last edited by MacOneDouble; 11-23-2018 at 02:31 PM.
It’s simultaneously simple and complex. A plate full of thanksgiving complete with cranberry sauce. Who wants to argue while there is still plenty of pie?
Turkey is a remarkably good game bird and tastes heavenly especially when cooked just right. It can't be mistaken for anything else, for example horse meat.
USA #1.
*see, just for one big example, WWII.
No they are not. They are after scientific society before US1.
No country is a scum.
Even Taliban tribes-people are not scum in the true sense. They just need to be introduced to me in a "cave" on Mars in 2029. Where the endgame that is called complexity part 2 will be played out on the first sentient machine that will explain to everyone why they are wrong and necessary in order to get all of it right eventually.
The future is greater than the past. The deep future is everything you ever wanted 100 times more imaginative, complex and impossible to live without when you have met it. It is that way precisely because of the past and its wisdom built on sacrifice.
Here's to the future and all that make it possible. It is their immortality.
Incidentally this is Zakynthos
(i have been there in that shipwreck beach before i came to US but not since)