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TUNA!
Darwin Vander Stelt wrote:
One would expect a conversation like this at a woman's quilting bee. ... Please cull the meniscus and refurbish the culled dictionary with delicious halibut. The dictionary culling will perhaps prove detrimental to the meniscus but seasonal trout will be eaten culling or no culling. [Those of you who are stupid, ignorant clods in need of and in thrall to dictionary definitions may not understand, but Wolfie and Weinberger know what I mean.] -- Ken Fortenberry |
TUNA!
"Darwin Vander Stelt" wrote... One would expect a conversation like this at a woman's quilting bee. Perhaps fly tieing attracts people, who, in their admirable fascination with minutiae, exhibit other characteristics usually associated with a bunch of damn women. It is becoming clear that this habit of continual nit-picking with the accompanying ad hominem attack is not some learned behavior which can be easily changed. It is a constitutional defect relating to sexual orientation. If you look like you have pms, act like you have pms, get ****y and mean like you have pms, damn, you could be a woman! But you probably tie really nice flies, and if you wished, could crochet and knit lovely doillies (sp) too! In a search for doiley making information to put me more in touch with my femine side, I came across this quote, which I thought appropriate for this group: "I have absolutely no place to put doilies, and yet I keep making more of them." Yes, Virginia, there are doiley whores. -- TL, Tim ------------------------ http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
TUNA!
"Darwin Vander Stelt" wrote in message ... One would expect a conversation like this at a woman's quilting bee. Perhaps fly tieing attracts people, who, in their admirable fascination with minutiae, exhibit other characteristics usually associated with a bunch of damn women. It is becoming clear that this habit of continual nit-picking with the accompanying ad hominem attack is not some learned behavior which can be easily changed. It is a constitutional defect relating to sexual orientation. If you look like you have pms, act like you have pms, get ****y and mean like you have pms, damn, you could be a woman! But you probably tie really nice flies, and if you wished, could crochet and knit lovely doillies (sp) too! my, my, darwin; pretty work! whence comest thou? and the nomme de plume is just perfect for this place... wayno |
TUNA!
Willi wrote in message ...
However, I don't see that as a widely held position by people on this newsgroup. I agree (and we worked real hard to get there :-). I too was surprised by cyli's statement. Yet there it was, and I'm inclined to believe she said it for some valid reason. Women tend to be more perceptive to the subtlies that flow underneath actualities. I guess we'll have to try harder :-) BTW, nice "yesterday" TR. Down here it rained _again_ last night. Alot. We're way over where we should be. It's absolutely wonderful, a miracle. Springtime is usually dry, dusty, and very windy. We've had very few windstorms and I'd say we're approaching 2" of rain over the last few days, with more in the forecast. On the maps it looks like this storm is generating more snow up in the Rio Grande basin in S. CO. I hope so. This land needs it. Jon. |
Glossy rags vs. ROFF
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TUNA!
"Charlie Choc" wrote in message ... Do a Google search on the phrase "culled from" and see what percentage of the usage in the results requires the 'culls' to be undesirable. -- Charlie... So, based on that, you wouldn't take offense if I called you a cull. :) Seriously though, it was enlightening , the usage seemed to run about 50/50. Interesting to note that, in all the instances listed, where the things culled were not considered undesireable (for a given purpose), they were inanimate objects such as books, receipes, articles, etc. ( though in some cases inanimate objects were culled because of unsuitability for a given purpose). However, in all cases listed in the search results where the objects being culled were (or had recently been) animate, the items culled were considered undesireable, or at least suspect. Since this whole discussion started with a statement about culling fish, and almost all my experience with the term has been in its usage with animate objects, I focused on the meaning of the word in that context, and thus may have had blinders on its broader application. I had planned on going fishing today and tomorrow, but just found out that the irrigation district that controls the dam above the water I intended to fish is increasing the flows for the season from 11CFS to 160CFS starting today. Oh well, the fishing should be good next week once the fish have settled in to their new feeding stations. Its more enjoyable to fish in water that is actually moving anyway. -- Bob Weinberger La, Grande, OR place a dot between bobs and stuff and remove invalid to send email |
TUNA!
On Mon, 05 Apr 2004 17:34:43 GMT, "Bob Weinberger"
wrote: "Charlie Choc" wrote in message .. . Do a Google search on the phrase "culled from" and see what percentage of the usage in the results requires the 'culls' to be undesirable. -- Charlie... So, based on that, you wouldn't take offense if I called you a cull. :) Not at all, but I expect you would be if I called you one. g That's the way loaded words work. Cull: the squaw of the new millennium. -- Charlie... |
TUNA!
Greg Pavlov wrote:
On Mon, 05 Apr 2004 12:16:24 +0200, JR wrote: ... The fly fishing industry strongly, actively pushes C&R. It consistently implies, or states more or less explicitly, that releasing a fish, in itself, is inherently somehow superior (economically, ecologically, morally) to killing a fish. C&R promotes more fisherman-hours on our waters, which should ultimately translate to more money spent on equipment. So it's a good business decision :-) Bingo. The industry tries to get its clients all warm and fuzzy about the "morality" and eco-friendliness of C&R but knows exactly which side its fish are buttered on. JR |
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