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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On 8/3/2015 2:12 AM, Directorate of Troll Removal and Disposal wrote:
FRAUD! Get the **** out of here, you FRAUD son of a biotch troll! Get out - stalker! ....dump! ____.-.____ [__Barbara__] [___J.Llorente ___] (d|||TROLL|||b) `|||ENABLER|||` ||||||||||| ||||||||||| ||||||||||| ||||||||||| `"""""""""' \\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~// |
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On 8/2/2015 2:08 PM, sf wrote:
The Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense founded on the Christian religion The United States Constitution serves as the law of the land for America and indicates the intent of our Founding Fathers. The Constitution forms a secular document, and nowhere does it appeal to God, Christianity, Jesus, or any supreme being. (For those who think the date of the Constitution contradicts the last sentence, see note 1 at the end.) The U.S. government derives from people (not God), as it clearly states in the preamble: "We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union...." The omission of God in the Constitution did not come out of forgetfulness, but rather out of the Founding Fathers purposeful intentions to keep government separate from religion. Although the Constitution does not include the phrase "Separation of Church & State," neither does it say "Freedom of religion." However, the Constitution implies both in the 1st Amendment. As to our freedoms, the 1st Amendment provides exclusionary wording: Congress shall make NO law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [bold caps, mine] Thomas Jefferson made an interpretation of the 1st Amendment to his January 1st, 1802 letter to the Committee of the Danbury Baptist Association calling it a "wall of separation between church and State." Madison had also written that "Strongly guarded. . . is the separation between religion and government in the Constitution of the United States." There existed little controversy about this interpretation from our Founding Fathers. If religionists better understood the concept of separation of Church & State, they would realize that the wall of separation actually protects their religion. Our secular government allows the free expression of religion and non-religion. Today, religions flourish in America; we have more churches than Seven-Elevens. Although many secular and atheist groups today support and fight for the wall of separation, this does not mean that they wish to lawfully eliminate religion from society. On the contrary, you will find no secular or atheist group attempting to ban Christianity, or any other religion from American society. Keeping religion separate allows atheists and religionists alike, to practice their belief systems, regardless how ridiculous they may seem, without government intervention. |
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On 8/2/2015 11:11 AM, Brooklyn1 wrote:
As Jeb Bush prepares for his imminent presidential campaign, the American people must keep in mind just who this man is and the crimes he committed rigging the 2000 presidential election, which put his brother George W. in the Oval Office, set us on the road to the Iraq War, the Great Recession, destroyed America’s standing in the world, altered American history forever. Jeb Bush just so happened to be the Governor of Florida during that election, and as you may recall, the Florida vote was so close that recounts were requested and eventually declared his brother the winner. Katherine Harris, Jeb’s secretary of state and the co-chair of the George W. campaign, organized the election system that somehow ended up losing or spoiling the ballots of hundreds of thousands of African-American voters, who just so coincidentally tend to vote Democratic. During the recount period, it is documented that the Governor’s office made 95 calls to the Bush campaign- calls which Jeb somehow “cannot remember” the reason for. That answer is unacceptable for allegations of such importance. Why can’t you remember, Jeb? |
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On 8/1/2015 8:00 AM, ChattyCathy wrote:
> On Mon, 20 Jul 2015 15:09:07 -0700, Gregory Morrow wrote: > >> So seeing Sheldon's garden pix got me all nostalgic about when I was a >> kid. A childhood memory was some of the food that my Midwestern small >> town grandparents routinely ate in the late 50's and into the 60's, some >> now seem a bit "old - fashioned" to me (but grandpa lived 1876 -> >> 1965!). Here are some: >> >> - ring baloney > > OK, I hafta ask, what's 'ring' baloney? (as opposed to 'normal' baloney - > which is known as 'polony' in my neck of the woods...) > > All my grandparents had passed on by the time I was about 6 or 7 - and I > never met any of them - but my Dad used to love 'stuffed cabbage leaves'; > he used to stuff them with a mixture of ground beef, onions, garlic and > carrots (IIRC) - which he said his Mom used to make and was one of his > father's favourites. > > Unfortunately, being a cabbage hater, I didn't like them and don't make > them myself. Stuffed bell peppers, OTOH - are really good. > LTNS, Cathy! Sort of a flip-flop. I love stuffed cabbage rolls. I wouldn't go out of my way to make stuffed bell peppers. You don't like cabbage, don't want to make a meal out of it. I don't like bell peppers, don't want to make a meal out of it. ![]() I do tolerate bell peppers when diced. It depends on the dish. Jill |
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On Tue, 21 Jul 2015 16:16:14 -0500, Moe DeLoughan >
wrote: >loosemeat (crumbled seasoned ground beef cooked in a skillet and >served on buttered bread) my goodness...Taco Bell jumped on this concept and ran with it. I think they should still offer the butter bread too! William |
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On 8/7/2015 10:41 PM, William wrote:
I have, on at least three prior occasions, written posts that delve into the “alleged” lurid past of one of our former presidents, George Herbert Walker Bush (GHWB), the current but ailing patriarch of the Bush Family Dynasty – I refer to them as the Bush Family Crime Syndicate, certainly not in terms of endearment – but rather more like the Mafia Godfather who prepares his sons to take over the family business upon his death. This particular post references an article by Stew Webb, a contributor of Veterans Today. In his life-time, George H. W. Bush (GHWB) has controlled every clandestine (hidden from view) and secret organization/operation within the arsenal of the United States government as either 1) Director of the CIA, 2) Vice President to Ronald Reagan (who was an unwitting puppet to the Bush controlled cabal – GHWB secretly gave Reagan poisons that hastened his fall into Alzheimer’s Disease and evidence suggests he helped plan Reagan’ attempted assassination by John Hinckley, whose family were close friends of the Bush family – a coincidence?) and 3) ultimately as President of the United States before Bill Clinton took office. |
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