O/T: Clothes Lines
On May 13, 10:56*am, blake murphy > wrote:
> On Thu, 13 May 2010 05:32:55 -0700 (PDT), Food SnobŪ wrote:
> > On May 13, 7:23*am, brooklyn1 > wrote:
> >> On Wed, 12 May 2010 21:34:26 -0700 (PDT), Food SnobŪ
>
> >> > wrote:
> >>>On May 12, 11:06*pm, itsjoannotjoann >
> >>>wrote:
> >>>> On May 12, 10:01*pm, Food SnobŪ > wrote:
>
> >>>> > On May 12, 9:49*pm, John Kuthe > wrote:
>
> >>>> > > On May 12, 9:38*pm, "Lew Hodgett" > wrote:
>
> >>>> > > > As a kid, I still remember wiping the clothes lines for my mother.
>
> >>>> > > > She still hung her clothes on a clothes line at 102. Didn't like the
> >>>> > > > smell of clothes from the dryer.
>
> >>>> > > > Enjoy
>
> >>>> Ummmmmm, I still use a clothes line. *I used mine today to hang out
> >>>> sheets and yes, I have a clothes pin bag, too. *Clothes pins left on
> >>>> the line get dirty and transfer that dirt to your freshly washed
> >>>> items. *But I usually stop using it sometime in November and start up
> >>>> again in April.
>
> >>>In many places they are against the rules.
>
> >> White trash have clothelines in front.
>
> > You know why White trash put old appliances in their front yards? *So
> > that everyone who drives by can see that they have gotten *new*
> > appliances.
>
> > --Bryan
>
> good to see you're not bigoted at all.
White trash is a culture. Sure it's associated with the ''White
Race,'' just as ''ghetto'' is a culture associated with Blacks.
Neither term denigrates typical White or Black folks.
>
> blake
--Bryan
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