I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange
Comments
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So pleased to hear your news Glenna!
Great photos RL!
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Yawn, Glenna, so happy (yawn) to hear your good news (yawn).
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RL, Beautiful pictures. Yes, film cameras are special but it sure is nice with the digital. I like seeing if I need to take another shot instead of waiting for the film to be developed and finding I just have a blur.
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Hugely boring hugs for Glenna and her great news!! So glad to hear it. :-)
Beautiful pics, RL. Both they and Glenna's news were a wonderful way to start the day.
E
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Yay, Glenna!

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Glenna .. I am so happy for you! Great news on the scans! Now if you can just get some relief from the neuropathy.
Libby ... The butterflies are beautiful ... sounds like you're really enjoying your retirement!
hugs,
Bren
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Blue - almost choked laughing at your picture - and hold onto that brain for a good long time, it's got good stuff in it!!
RL - gorgeous shots. I love butterflies
Hubby and I just bought a digital SLR (Nikon) - We've been so #$%^ busy that we haven't even opened the box yet!!Glenna - SO glad to hear your test results.
Chickadee - corn and cantalopes. Love 'em both. (Well, good ones, anyway), but hubby is allergic to both, so we don't eat 'em anymore...
We also try to avoid food grown in Mexico. -
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E...then how come so many people insist that the founding fathers included all the religious references and therefore they are the sacred foundation of your country? I don't get it.
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Pip, it's because those people look at things through these:

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BENGHAZI!
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I thought it was because "those people" can't tell fact from wishful thinking! They're the same ones who declare their "god-given" rights to, uh, let's see, bear arms.
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Glenna - fabulous boring news! Congratulations.
Now, we gotta put our Boring News Vision on chickadee.
Acupuncture '"needles" are SO thin, about the width of a human hair, really, not the "sewing needles" anyone wold be thinking of when hearing the word "needles."
E - thanks for the reminder there ain't no such thing in our founding documents about being a christian nation, and Under God is under review in MA right now - yippee....love being in a BLUE state, with great sweet corn too, also Hadley Grass, which is what folks call the asparagus grown there....
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"BENGHAZI!"
BAZINGA! -
The following is an essay entitled "Grammar Police: C'est Moi" published by a retired English teacher in today's Globe & Mail. Hope you enjoy it!
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I realize now that my years as a high-school teacher of English have left me with a disease that will burden me till death. Every little misused apostrophe, dangling participle, “may” instead of “might,” “less” instead of “fewer,” “flout” instead of “flaunt” flames out at me and I have to douse the fire.
That was my job, of course, for 27 years. Early on, I had practised smiling affably when, over drinks at a party, a new acquaintance learning that I taught English would simper: “Well now, I guess I’ll have to watch my grammar.”
I thought at the time this was a social blunder on a par with asking an orthopedic surgeon you’ve just met for his opinions on that nagging pain in your ischial tuberosities, but it turns out the woman was right. With me you do have to watch it.
I liked teaching – not only literature, but also the felicities and consistent inconsistencies of the English language. Not a lot of time was spent on linguistic pedantry; I can recall, for instance, a rap version of Oedipus Rex,and a noisy student altercation on the moral character of Richard III.
Precision, however, was expected and corrections had to be made, errors analyzed and discussed. The kids were tolerant and willing, if sometimes bewildered by the flurry of arthritic scribbles in the margins of their essays.
One student, I remember, came back with a paper I had generously and hastily annotated.
“What did I do so wrong?”
“Oh, it’s not really so bad, but you’ve shifted tenses all the way. Look – here and here and here – everywhere I’ve noted ‘Shift.’ ”
“Oh, it’s ‘Shift’ you’ve written. I thought …”
We both laughed. Still, he went away with a keener appreciation of the use of the historical present tense.
There is some evidence that I have infected generations. A former student now working in a police station in California tells me that for years she has been designated the incumbent “grammar police,” and all incident reports have to go under her scrutiny. “Hanged himself,” for example, must replace “hung himself.”
Another, an Alberta Public Works official, once told me that his prudent removal of a comma placed before a restrictive clause saved the province several thousand contract dollars.
So, the disease is not all bad – but it does produce blindness. As part of my professional duty I was expected to help mark provincial examinations, and at one point was assigned to the Techniques Team. This was a long time ago, when language expectations were more constipated, and the team’s task was simply to read each student paper for spelling and syntactic errors, taking off marks up to a certain total. Easy. But at the end of one day of this, I got home and immediately deducted 13 points from my mother’s weekly letter from Scotland before learning that there had been a fire in her back kitchen.
I would have expected this urge to defend the language to dwindle with my retirement. I once laughed at the establishment of the Apostrophe Protection Association; now I am thinking of registering.
The trouble is that every aspect of my otherwise temperate life is still dogged by this accursed compulsion to wield the red pen.
When I go to the Edmonton Opera, I sit in a row carefully chosen so that I’ll have to tilt my head to read the surtitles. This way if I carefully maintain a rigid neck position I can avoid seeing not only the banalities of the English libretto translations, but also the occasional wrong “it’s” for “its.”
My civic duties are also impaired. At an election forum for candidates for the Edmonton Public School Board, I was sitting, list of names on my knee, and quietly striking out those whose language seemed to me inept enough to disqualify them from trusteeship. A man behind me finally tapped me on the shoulder and whispered: “Lady, you’re gonna have none left.”
On my daily walks around my pleasant suburb I find myself crossing to the opposite sidewalk on 75th Avenue so that I won’t have to look at that neat cedar sign in front of “The Wilson’s.”
Safeway is a constant fruitful source of what has been called the “greengrocers’ apostrophe.” I have been known to interrogate a stacker of “melon’s” on what it is that the melon possesses. He sees me coming now and moves over to Organics.
It is too late for me to accept that English is a mongrel language with all the accompanying mongrel vigour, growth and flexibility. So, I salute the final gesture of a good old friend, a fellow teacher and a lover of words, who died recently. Not many days before the end, he was being examined yet again by one of a series of doctors.
“Now, just lay back there, sir, and we’ll …”
A last summoning of energy and the retort: “LIE back!”
Way to go.
June Menzies lives in Edmonton.
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And another essay, this time by Monty Pythonesque John Cleese, on the reactions of several countries to the situation in Syria:
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“The English are feeling the pinch in relation to recent events in Syria and have therefore raised their security level from “Miffed” to “Peeved.” Soon, though, security levels may be raised yet again to “Irritated” or even “A Bit Cross.” The English have not been “A Bit Cross” since the blitz in 1940 when tea supplies nearly ran out. Terrorists have been re-categorized from “Tiresome” to “A Bloody Nuisance.” The last time the British issued a “Bloody Nuisance” warning level was in 1588, when threatened by the Spanish Armada.
The Scots have raised their threat level from “Pissed Off” to “Let’s get the Bastards.” They don’t have any other levels. This is the reason they have been used on the front line of the British army for the last 300 years.
The French government announced yesterday that it has raised its terror alert level from “Run” to “Hide.” The only two higher levels in France are “Collaborate” and “Surrender.” The rise was precipitated by a recent fire that destroyed France ‘s white flag factory, effectively paralysing the country’s military capability.
Italy has increased the alert level from “Shout Loudly and Excitedly” to “Elaborate Military Posturing.” Two more levels remain: “Ineffective Combat Operations” and “Change Sides.”
The Germans have increased their alert state from “Disdainful Arrogance” to “Dress in Uniform and Sing Marching Songs.” They also have two higher levels: “Invade a Neighbour” and “Lose.”
Belgians, on the other hand, are all on holiday as usual; the only threat they are worried about is NATO pulling out of Brussels.
The Spanish are all excited to see their new submarines ready to deploy. These beautifully designed subs have glass bottoms so the new Spanish navy can get a really good look at the old Spanish navy.
Australia, meanwhile, has raised its security level from “No worries” to “She’ll be alright, Mate.” Two more escalation levels remain: “Crikey! I think we’ll need to cancel the barbie this weekend!” and “The barbie is cancelled.” So far no situation has ever warranted use of the last final escalation level.
– John Cleese – British writer, actor and tall person.
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C4C you have made my day. Thank-you. Deeply, from the bottom of my soulless heart!!!

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CFC - LOL - with our election tomorrow, I can tell you there will be lots of celebratory barbie's

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C4C--That was GRATE--oops Great!!! People just don't realize how important language and puncutation really are,along with proper spelling. Although, in another ten years, everything will just be, LOL,ROFLMAO,TY,GB,etc.,etc.---kad2kar
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Our threat levels are "make more bombs and highly inflated prices", "arm the bombs", and finally "bomb someone, anyone".
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either that or:
walk around nervous, start frisking anyone who doesn't look like you, start blaming the "libs" for weakening security, run around yelling that no one is scared enough, pull out your AK-47 and start shooting.
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So True.

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Me and my guns are at the ready --- they are however, squirt guns, but I figure they will have to do.
Enjoyed all I read....and Glenna.....so glad you are BORING. I'm far, far better at Literature than ever was I at good ole' English. I think it stems from having to take third grade off and spend it in bed with Rhuematic Fever. Doctor here was not sure about treatment that long ago so did the best he could. I was given 12 different pills ( I'm sure some were vitamins ) every four hours without fail for several months. My teachers came and tutored in the subjects that i had not as yet done well with which was English and Math. I turned out to be a book-keeper for many years, but no one needed any English services from me......and that was a good thing.
Jackie
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Glenna - delighted with your "boring" news - hope you're celebrating.
C4C - today on CBC the afternoon news anchor (newsreader) actually used the word "runner-ups" - every single day on CP24 there are grammatical errors but this one made me change the channel!
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I am celebrating ... With a long weekend at the beach with good friends I worked with at my church. I'm here alone tonight watching the ravens. Came early to get everything ready. Love the solitude once in a while! Thanks for all the good wishes.
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http://www.theonion.com/articles/poll-majority-of-americans-approve-of-sending-cong,33752
Poll: Majority Of Americans Approve Of Sending Congress To Syria
EWS • Syria • News • ISSUE 49•36 • Sep 5, 2013
WASHINGTON—As President Obama continues to push for a plan of limited military intervention in Syria, a new poll of Americans has found that though the nation remains wary over the prospect of becoming involved in another Middle Eastern war, the vast majority of U.S. citizens strongly approve of sending Congress to Syria.
The New York Times/CBS News poll showed that though just 1 in 4 Americans believe that the United States has a responsibility to intervene in the Syrian conflict, more than 90 percent of the public is convinced that putting all 535 representatives of the United States Congress on the ground in Syria—including Senate pro tempore Patrick Leahy, House Speaker John Boehner, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, and, in fact, all current members of the House and Senate—is the best course of action at this time.
“I believe it is in the best interest of the United States, and the global community as a whole, to move forward with the deployment of all U.S. congressional leaders to Syria immediately,” respondent Carol Abare, 50, said in the nationwide telephone survey, echoing the thoughts of an estimated 9 in 10 Americans who said they “strongly support” any plan of action that involves putting the U.S. House and Senate on the ground in the war-torn Middle Eastern state. “With violence intensifying every day, now is absolutely the right moment—the perfect moment, really—for the United States to send our legislators to the region.”
“In fact, my preference would have been for Congress to be deployed months ago,” she added.
Citing overwhelming support from the international community—including that of the Arab League, Turkey, and France, as well as Great Britain, Iraq, Iran, Russia, Japan, Mexico, China, and Canada, all of whom are reported to be unilaterally in favor of sending the U.S. Congress to Syria—the majority of survey respondents said they believe the United States should refocus its entire approach to Syria’s civil war on the ground deployment of U.S. senators and representatives, regardless of whether the Assad regime used chemical weapons or not. -
CforC....great article....I'm all for it.
Jackie
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Hmmm

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