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Lost_In_The_Thinking
Member for: 1.3 years

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NutziHiveKickers,

This is one of the most unintentionally funny things I've ever read on reddit.


/v/Jews viewpost?postid=663ab9669c723

Is that whore still talking? Why? She got paid off years ago, and part of that was to keep her whore mouth shut.


/v/news viewpost?postid=663aab059611a

No, that's 1977. People especially didn't dress like that in 1877.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=66386f2085427

The article says she died of a heart attack, which is also a lie. When she was living in Laurel Canyon in the 60s and 70s, she and John Phillips were responsible for bringing most of the drugs consumed by other degenerate musicians and actors in the canyon. Her death was probably the result of that activity, like a bad drug deal.


/v/FatPeopleHate viewpost?postid=663a1152122a9

In the late 1970s there was a new, very small chain called Dogfather's. (Yes, that's the spelling.) It was a California coast eatery. They offered frankfurters and other tasty ingredients in pita bread, and it was amazing. One of their unique sandwiches was called the Eggfather, which was fried potatoes and eggs and onions served in pita bread. I've never had anything like it since. They went out of business a few short years later, but I still miss that.

Oh, and there was an A&W in my hometown, and my dad and I would go there sometimes for a frosty mug. We especially liked the car service with the trays that hung on the driver's side window.

And we also had a Sambo's the family used to go to. The building is still there, but it's now a Mexican place.

I remember seeing Po Folks restaurants when I lived in the South. I think I missed out by never having an opportunity to eat there.


/v/GEN_X_Pub_n_Grill viewpost?postid=663843c5bf9a5

>I call Bullshit too!

Glad to hear that. I grew up in a time when housewives and mothers actually DID spend a lot of time on desserts for special occasions and I was able to enjoy some of them. I have my mother's old cookbook which she received as a wedding present (it's something like 1500 pages, just enormous) and it describes desserts similar to these. They weren't all everyday desserts, and some were specifically special occasion desserts because of the complexity and time involved to make them. But at family events when everyone would bring something nice, I've enjoyed more than one pineapple upside-down cake, and they were fantastic.

This was a time when women cooked with butter, milk and cream, and real sugar, and the difference when that's done these days is remarkable. I remember doing fondue with my mom and brothers and it was great because it was a family dinner, not a night with TV dinners watching TV. The dinner with family was the event, and the food only made it better.


/v/GEN_X_Pub_n_Grill viewpost?postid=663839a5c89dc

I've never heard of a case of that happening.


/v/TellUpgoat viewpost?postid=66382521c463b

I stopped watching after a few minutes. I got sick of the narrator harping on how consumer tastes changed in favor of "more complex flavors" and "healthier, less sugary alternatives". That's an absolute load of horseshit. Consumers got lazy and stopped making their own creative deserts with good ingredients, like real butter, cream, fresh fruits, sugar rather than artificial sweeteners.

Fuck consumers, and fuck popular tastes, which are based on convenience and availability rather than any real discernment of the good, rich flavor of food.


/v/GEN_X_Pub_n_Grill viewpost?postid=663839a5c89dc

I can't say enough good things about that film. It was perfectly made and perfectly presented.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=663563a3d19b6

You got that right. I plough through numerous audiobooks on various subject, many of the politically incorrect variety. Those are a bit hard to find, and I've found very few that actually name the jew. When I started typing this, I looked up one book that greatly influenced me, "The Myth of German Villainy" by Benton Bradberry, mostly because he names the jew. I found an audiobook version of it on archive.org. As I said, those are hard to find and far and few between, but I'm just started downloading it now. You can find it here:

https://archive.org/details/the-myth-of-german-villainy_20220112

There's some good stuff out there if you look.

I'm also listening to a guy named Simon Winchester, who wrote "The Profession and the Madman" (on which a terrible movie was based). I think his best is "The Perfectionists", where he explains how high precision in machinists and engineers created the industrial world, for better or worse, but demanding better and finer precision in their measuring instruments, giving us the duality of Henry Ford, whose extremely finely built cars were manufactured to help the common man, and the two creators of the company Mercedes Benz, who pursued supreme exactness in their machines and manufactures.

And the best part is none of them were or are jews, *especially* Henry Ford, who despised them.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=66359435c9bec

Total fail, Neri. You failed to catch the reference to the common phrase used here "and for no reason at all ..." and failed to understand why Germans harbored such hate for jews who lived there. If you're ignorant on those reasons, and they are long-standing and quite numerous, I won't teach you, I won't even offer, because you won't believe it, despite how well-documented the jews' predatory behavior in Germany for the previous seven hundred years before the Third Reich is.

Your taking one quote out of context and misinterpreting what the man said. They expelled the jews, not because they were scapegoats for the Germans' behavior, rather the jews were expelled because of their own obnoxious, anti-social, and predatory behavior.

Lastly, you're wrong in your last paragraph. It is your fault that you're a failure, regardless of what you do. If you fail to understand, it's your failure to educate yourself.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=663563a3d19b6

There's nothing wrong with audiobooks. I read quite a lot, but a few days a week I have a two-hour round trip commute, and I always like listening to something worthwhile.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=66359435c9bec

Right, "no different from us in all important respects". So I guess Germany removed jews from their country "for no reason at all". I'm hoping you see the ridiculousness in what you said, Neri.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=663563a3d19b6

"Stop arguing with them". Best advice ever. Don't engage. Don't acknowledge. Just ignore. You can say nothing that will make any difference, and it will show your superiority by being able to stay above it all while they're having a nigger meltdown.

If anyone ever calls to you "Sir! Sir! I need to talk to you!" or "Come over here, come here, I want to show you something" or anything like that, just move on, don't acknowledge them, and show that you have no interest in talking to them, or even acknowledging their being there.

Ignore niggers. Avoid the groid.


/v/TellUpgoat viewpost?postid=66355ebed3516

I think he suffered a severe brain injury when he was in an accident during the filming of "Star Wars". He never looked quite the same after that.


/v/ClownWorld viewpost?postid=6635608691f08

What's a "nazi"? Do you mean the German men associated with the Third Reich from 1933 to 1945? Or do you mean the larpers and posers today who call themselves "nazis"?

By the way, when the Third Reich was deporting you jews, they all looked like beady-eyed, hook-nosed, snaggle-toothed rejects from the gene pool. Just watch "Der ewige Jude" (The Eternal Jew). The Germans knew what they were talking about.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=663563a3d19b6

Because the companies DARPA contracted with to build it aren't bound by DEI regulations, I'm guessing.


/v/Military viewpost?postid=6635612cdc820

My dad was an electronics engineer and showed me how to build a non-powered wireless radio. It was basically just an induction coil and a tunable crystal that was grounded to a water pipe, but I thought it was magic.


/v/whatever viewpost?postid=663256066402b