And that reminds me of the last episode of Seinfeld.
Bob
And that reminds me of the last episode of Seinfeld.
Bob
I know I'm missing something, somewhere, but I have never been able to get through more than 2-3 minutes of Seinfeld. I find him almost as funny as my grandkids were 5 years ago (at 8 and 9 respectively...as teenagers, they're even less funny).
Charlie Self
"The income tax has made liars out of more Americans than golf." Will Rogers
Well Charlie, we agree on a few things. :-) I watched one or two episodes of Seinfeld; what I thought was really funny is that someone actually convinced people to invest in producing this show. Even more funny that people actually watched this show.
In the final episode of Seinfeld, the four leading characters, a bunch of self-absorbed fools, are locked up together in the same cell for a year. In "No Exit," three very diverse, recently dead people wind up in a room in (literally) Hotel Hell with the door locked. As the story unfolds, it becomes apparent that they will never be able to coexist, creating their own hell. Sartre's point is that humans make their own lives and afterlives. Not a freakin' chance that this could be ObWW.
Bob
This is a classic error that woodworkers have made throughout history. You see, a chair is really just a tool for eating dinner. Woodworkers focus on the chair as some sort of project, rather than as a tool that should fade into the background.
I don't think so, but he might have been a pretty good dinner eater.
Ken Muldrew snipped-for-privacy@ucalgazry.ca (remove all letters after y in the alphabet)
You are encumbered by a literal understanding of the average everydayness of grammar. The "how" goes to the method of thought. the "what" is subservient to the "how".
Regards, Tom Thomas J. Watson-Cabinetmaker Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania
I don't know...in a couple more days we should maybe start passing the hat for bail money.
Regards, Tom Thomas J. Watson-Cabinetmaker Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania
On Mon, 06 Oct 2003 18:51:41 -0400, Tom Watson pixelated:
You bloody philo-poetic types indubitably derive my capra hircus.
Absolutely. And the table is really just an instrument for holding the dinner to be eaten. And the food is just a tool for providing us sustenance. And the houses we live in are just to protect us from the elements. And ...
And I expect he would have been happy eating the same thing every day.
ObWW -- How much wood would John Stuart Mill mill if John Stuart Mill could mill wood?
Chuck Vance Just say (tmPL) I Kant believe I'm really doing this.
Both of yuz is ole goats.
Regards, Tom Thomas J. Watson-Cabinetmaker Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania
History is just one damn tool after another.
There is no project.
Well...except for this desk I'm about to start. It certainly feels like a project. I don't think I'd be fussing over it so much if it was just a tool.
Ken Muldrew snipped-for-privacy@ucalgazry.ca (remove all letters after y in the alphabet)
I submit the following to you in the interest of science. You may draw your own confusions.
Comparison of Google hits in rec.norm v. rec.food.cooking using the same search terms. Data valid as of October 7, 2003 - 1600 eastern.
Search Term rec.food.cooking rec.norm
pot 40,600 2,550
pan 57,100 1,600
meat 81,500 2,130
potato 23,600 443
vegetable 22,800 1,120
bread 57,700 1,670
mixer 10,200 284
microwave 15,700 1,150
wood 9,760 252,000
saw 28,400 239,000
drill 775 43,500
plan 13,000 36,100
recipe 185,000 1,430
chisel 137 12,800
hammer 1,480 9,060
sex 5,300 1,590
drugs 2,210 818
rock and roll 700 521
beer 18,100 4,020
bullshit 1,530 1,010
Regards, Tom Thomas J. Watson-Cabinetmaker Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania
On Tue, 07 Oct 2003 16:54:18 GMT, snipped-for-privacy@ucalgazry.ca (Ken Muldrew) pixelated:
Hmmm...
--- Is it time for your medication or mine?
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