I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange

Options
120212325261828

Comments

  • Alpal
    Alpal Member Posts: 1,785
    edited January 2011

    Kadeeb - that sounds delicious. I actually like them, but I'd like anything with bacon, garlic, butter and wine. Could we start on okra now? It's ok in gumbo and pickled, but other than that, ugh!

  • rosemary-b
    rosemary-b Member Posts: 2,006
    edited January 2011

    Okra is okay breaded and deep fat fried.

    We went out to eat Friday and DH and I split deep fat fried cheesecake. It was coated in graham cracker crumbs and sugar. Yummy. I love fried stuff but hardly ever eat it.

    I need to get out of my cooking rut. We seem to have a lot of baked chicken or cube steaks and baked potatoes or baked sweet potatoes. All I have energy for.

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited January 2011

    Kadeeb, I don't agree with eveyone's posts but I don't delete. I welcome exchanges of ideas. I still say things will be different when we know for sure who the deleters are.

    Welcome Sharon. I don't know much about politics either but left, right, whatever, something has to give and change.

  • Medigal
    Medigal Member Posts: 1,412
    edited January 2011
    enjoyful:  I had to laugh when I read your post:  "Is the shooter an Atheist?"   Does he get a stiffer sentence if he is?Wink  Seriously, some of the nicest people I know are Atheists and I don't think it would occur to them to do the violence this man did.  It is a matter of sanity and a good working conscience.  I think whatever his religion or non-religion status is, should not come into question. However, when it came to the Abortion Clinic killings etc., that, imo, did take a certain type of person who was so Pro-Life that they had to kill to prove their dedication to life.  It will be interesting when it does come out what the shooter's real motives were but that may take some time.
  • rosemary-b
    rosemary-b Member Posts: 2,006
    edited January 2011

    Hope is the thing with feathers

    By Emily Dickenson

    Hope is the thing with feathers,

    That perches on the soul,

    And sings the tune without the words,

    And never leaves at all.

    And sweetest in the gale is heard;

    And  sore must be the storm

    That could abash the little bird

    That kept so many warm.

    I've heard it in the chillest land,

    And on the strangest sea,

    Yet, never, in extremity,

    It asked a crumb of me.

  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited January 2011

    Great poem .. I read it three times!

  • rosemary-b
    rosemary-b Member Posts: 2,006
    edited January 2011

    IThe poem is taped to my computer moniter and is one of the things that keeps my going. (There are also 8 grandchildren under 6- 3 born since July. My reward for having teenagers.)

  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited January 2011

    http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/01/11/arizona.funeral.westboro/index.html?hpt=T1

    Angel wings to be used at funeral of 9 year-old girl to create barrier to Westboro Church protesters.

    "They're planning an "angel action" -- with 8- by 10-foot "angel wings" worn by participants and used to shield mourners from pickets. The actions were created by Coloradan Romaine Patterson, who was shocked to find the Topeka church and its neon signs outside the 1999 funeral of Matthew Shepherd, a young gay man beaten and left on a fence to die in Laramie, Wyoming.

    "We want to surround them, in a nonviolent way, to say that our community is united," Gilmer said. "We're a peaceful haven."

  • Medigal
    Medigal Member Posts: 1,412
    edited January 2011

    Angel wings.  What a beautiful message to give to those who would create havoc.  That is a great way to protect themselves from the troublemakers.

  • Moderators
    Moderators Member Posts: 25,912
    edited January 2011

    Deleting posts is warranted if the post has broken the rules of conduct, not if you disagree with the posted comment. Posters who inappropriately delete posts because they do not agree with the person's position will be penalized.

    Thank you for your understanding.

    Melissa

  • pip57
    pip57 Member Posts: 12,401
    edited January 2011

    Lassie, I am with your Grandson on the brussel  sprouts.

     It just saddens me to read of all the ways you ladies are assaulting a perfectly innocent and unique vegetable.  Talking of sauteing  and deep frying is just nasty rhetoric that will end up causing great harm to these adorable veggies.  Peanut butter....that is just cruel.

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited January 2011

    Thank you Melissa.

  • rosemary-b
    rosemary-b Member Posts: 2,006
    edited January 2011

    Brussel sprouts, adorable? My kids call them Incredible Hulk Heads. Nutritious yes cute maybe.

  • worldwatcher
    worldwatcher Member Posts: 205
    edited January 2011

    PIP,

    I've been reading all these atrocious assaults on sprouts...what some ladies don't seem to recognize is that Brussel sprouts are baby cabbages!

    Peanut butter! Awful! (j/k)

    I love fried cabbage...mince a couple of bacon strips, cook until crisp, add some chopped onion to the sliced up cabbage and bacon and saute on medium heat until it reaches the level of tenderness you like.  These adult cabbages are fair game, IMO.

    OOPS! Is  saying "fair game" allowed?

  • crazy4carrots
    crazy4carrots Member Posts: 5,324
    edited January 2011

    PiP -- ROTFLMAO!!!!!

  • pip57
    pip57 Member Posts: 12,401
    edited January 2011

    Sorry, I still believe that the only vegetable that deserves such treatment is.....turnip.  Yuck!

  • rosemary-b
    rosemary-b Member Posts: 2,006
    edited January 2011

    PIP

     Turnips deserve to be simmered in soup for a long time. Otherwise they are intolerable.

    I am however sorry that I ever allowed my children to be so insensitive as to call innocent brussel sprouts names. Even though I think they are a nasty vegetable.

  • worldwatcher
    worldwatcher Member Posts: 205
    edited January 2011

    In all the rhetoric, the other victims of Loughler are being overlooked.  The Wall Street Journal has an article today on Loughler's parents:

    Father of Shooting Suspect May Issue Statement

    The article ends with this:  "It was Mr. Smith who told the Loughners what had happened Saturday. They returned from shopping, grocery bags in their peeling white Chevy truck, to find sheriffs' cars parked in front of the house and deputies stringing up crime-scene tape.

    Mr. Smith, who had seen the news on TV, walked up and told them their son was suspected in a mass shooting.

    "She almost passed out right there," Mr. Smith said. "He sat in the road with the tape up and cried."

    DO click on the pictures at the bottom of the article.  That will bring up a brief obituary of the victims killed in the shooting.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704428004576074771682115128.html

  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited January 2011

    Rosemary .. "Incredible Hulk Heads"  OMG .. you had me laughing out loud!!  Your kids are funny!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited January 2011

    Are you a vegetarian, Medigal?  You sound like one

  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited January 2011

    Thanks for the link WW.  It's good the WSJ posted the obituaries of the other victims.

    Bren

  • Maya2
    Maya2 Member Posts: 468
    edited January 2011

    I appreciated the WSJ story too. Thanks.

    I'm nearly a vegetarian. Only eat fish once or twice a week. Still having nightmares about the great brussel sprout invasion. Laughing

  • Marple
    Marple Member Posts: 19,143
    edited January 2011

    I will try to keep my vegetable comments down to a minimum.  I do love my veggies tho.

    I do need to learn more about politics than vegetables.  And I DO love brussel sprouts. 

  • Medigal
    Medigal Member Posts: 1,412
    edited January 2011

    worldwatcher:  Everyone seems so focused on the other victims that I wonder if they really understand what it truly must be like for the parents of this insane person.  First of all, what parents want to believe their child has serious mental problems that could end up with the death of other people.  They may have seen signs but closed their eyes to it because it was too hard for them to accept.  Many bad parents have raised children who turn our to be great citizens and many good parents have also ended up with children who turned out to be very bad.  I don't think being this evil is genetic.  Many prayed for the other victims but I think Loughner's parents need prayers too.  This must  be so devastating for them to cope with.  As for his getting psychiatric help.  A person who has mental problems can be very adept at "faking" it with psychiatrists.  They just have to be smart enough to tell them what they want to hear and no one ever finds out how really sick they are.  Doesn't matter now tho.  Killing innocent people is the red flag no matter what he says now to any psychiatrist!

  • Alpal
    Alpal Member Posts: 1,785
    edited January 2011

    Medigal - I agree. I've heard too many tragic stories of parents who spent years trying to get help for their kids, to no avail. Not saying that's what happened here, but shouldn't rush to judge them until we know the facts.

  • Medigal
    Medigal Member Posts: 1,412
    edited January 2011
    erica31:  Why do you think I am a vegetarian?  What does a vegan sound like?  I would like to know so I can monitor my posts to sound like what I really am.  Sorry to confuse you.  BTW:  our maintenace guy has a sign on his truck which I think is appropo:  Vegetarian:  An old Indian word for "Poor Shot!"Wink 
  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited January 2011

    Medigal ... that bumper sticker is funny!

  • pip57
    pip57 Member Posts: 12,401
    edited January 2011

    I do have a lot of empathy for his parents.  I have always said that I can't take credit for the good things my kids do because then I would have to take credit for the crap that they may do too. 

    I think that we have to be realistic and realize that there are a lot of people that are sitting on the fence between sanity and insane.  Until they do something like this they go unnoticed. 

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited January 2011

    Interesting article from David Brooks, NY Times (yes, I'm a moderate)

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/11/opinion/11brooks.html

  • AnneW
    AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
    edited January 2011

    Dottie, I like David Brooks' opinions though I often don't agree with him. He is a very thoughtful conservative, and I thought his column today was excellent. (He may not be conservative enough for some people, plus he has two strikes against him for writing for the NYTimes.)

    Heck, he probably eats brussel sprouts and turnips.

    Anne

Categories