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00:00 - 01:0001:00 - 00:00

01:01
@DannyuNDos I heard that, and this is only somewhat relevant, that 'popcorn' in Farsi is some kind of taboo word. @M.A.R. is that right? The world is a much better place with foreigners yelling out taboo words.
Almost bettern seeing someone slip on a banana peel.
I mean, calling someone (say) a term now considered a racial slur might be a reasonable subject of moral judgment, but spelling Beijing as "Peking" is not. Anyone who said it was somehow immoral to do so has worms in their brain.
cooks supper
@Mitch that's just shit on a shingle to you and me
@alphabet Then why did people change it?
@Cerberus I think I'd more than suggest that. I'd probably recommend it or even strongly assert it
Ingroup signalling.
01:02
Any change related to foreign cultures suggests P.C.
So you can know the good team from the bad team.
@Mitch Did you do assertiveness training at work?
@tchrist That is what one would think.
@alphabet people get super upset with 'oriental'. It's very hard to change if you're used to it for years.
People who use your shiny new words are the good team. Those who use the original words are the bad team. You have to keep making up new bullshit that way.
@Cerberus I don't actually know the history; again, I've almost never heard the old form and I wasn't alive when the change happened. Maybe it was for good reasons, maybe it was for nonsensical ones.
01:03
Nobody's not saying oriental.
@tchrist Yes, the way of Newspeak.
Exactly.
The euphemism cycle.
@Cerberus no but I did do DEI training.
That's what the coastal jerks try to do the rest of us. Ignore them.
01:04
Opus Dei?
Mostly common sense like 'don't be a dick'
The opera are yet to start.
@Mitch Whatever you say, Mister Tracy.
@tchrist it's taking me a while to parse and calculate that...hold on
@Mitch ...half as much as they usen't to.
Except yeah people get upset if a Westerner calls an easterner an 'oriental'
01:06
Bostonians, you mean.
Sorry, that was an occident.
The quirk is, the world isn't just the west and the east.
@DannyuNDos True: you can split it up into two hemispheres: one the Pacific Ocean and the other everything else.
I'm still concerned about people calling us Asians when they're referring only to CJK, I mean.
"Politically correctness" is quite often just a label people apply to any sort of moral judgment about language use, particularly condemnation of traditionally established language.
@tchrist I've been waiting years to do that and you just blurted it out
@DannyuNDos it's all problematic.
01:09
@DannyuNDos Asian is the new Oriental: BANNED!
Granted, many of those judgments are wrong, but you can't just dismiss any sort of moral judgment about language use.
@DannyuNDos What is CJK?
And who are "us"?
Since things are capable of being morally right or morally wrong.
@Cerberus China, Japan, and Korea.
The ones in the Han db.
It's a Unicode supplement.
01:11
@alphabet When it is that kind of moral judgement, it is usually wrong.
@DannyuNDos I agree.
I would never do that.
It is ignorant.
And not old enough to have lost any meaning.
That said... Is "North Asia" just Russia?
It takes a few centuries to acquire the status of Indians.
@DannyuNDos Nobody says North Asia!
Id say that's just not a thing (at least in English)
@DannyuNDos Yeah, whenever you describe someone as "Asian" people typically assume you mean "East Asian," but people from (say) India still get called "Asian-American," an inconsistency arising from...who even knows.
West Asia, South Asia, South-East Asia, East Asia.
01:13
In BrE Asian means exclusively subcontinental
@Cerberus Why?
Where West Asia can be traditionally divided into the Near East and the Middle East.
I've never heard the term West Asia
I mean, if Russia would lose the war, it would disassemble, leaving some regions in "North Asia".
@alphabet Because it is usually based on hypes, not balanced thinking; and because it is usually based on superficiality, ignoring how language actually works.
01:14
What about Asia Minor?
@Cerberus I still don't know what the Near East is. Morocco?
@Mitch Because we usually say Near East et sim.
@Mitch Normally not: the Near East is only Asian.
Proche Orient.
@Mitch Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, such countries.
You can extend it up to the Far East (South Asia+); or you can put the Middle East in between the Near East and the Far East.
@jlliagre Voilà. Et l'extrême-orient, n'est-ce-pas?
@DannyuNDos Yup!
01:16
@jlliagre these all seem like outdated colonial terms. Just use the country names
@Cerberus Yes, what French calls Proche Orient, English calls Middle East.
I think, if you use Middle East, that is between Mesopotamia and South Asia.
I still can't figure out 'Scandinavia'
And what are the -stans to you? "Central Asia"?
@jlliagre The proper term is Near East. Middle East is common, but not quite correct.
01:17
@Mitch you mean if the Farsi word for popcorn is taboo?
@Mitch I believe that is the countries speaking Scandinavian languages.
@jlliagre I vote for 'The Levant'
@Mitch Norway, Sweden, and... Finland?
@DannyuNDos I think those are Central Asia or Middle East, depending on your system.
Central is common.
@Cerberus I had never heard or read 'Near East' before.
01:18
@DannyuNDos They don't speak Scandinavian languages (northern Germanic) in Finland.
They do in Denmark and Iceland.
I know; I was saying region-wise.
@M.A.R. well not the translation of popcorn to the native Farsi term but popcorn pronounced ina Farsi accent heard by a Farsi speaker
@jlliagre It is the most correct term if you want to use the "East" terminology.
I've heard 'Near East' only because Farsi scholars are constantly seething over selfish Europeans describing the world in their own perspective and not admitting we are more awesomer than Europeans.
Then use West Asia.
01:19
@DannyuNDos not Denmark or Iceland?
@Mitch Levant is outdated except maybe in Pays du soleil levant.
@Mitch Yeah, those also, I think.
Levant is also fine.
Though a bit confusing.
Levant of course ought to mean the same thing as orient...but in practice it does not.
So I would avoid it if precision matters in context.
@Cerberus well it sure don't mean Iran
Yeah.
So that is confusing.
01:23
@jlliagre it's super outdated in English too, sounds like Thackery or Henry James
The traditional use of the "East" terminology—except that the Far East is everything east of the Indus usually.
@Cerberus most of India is Far East?
Where Near East and Levant are very similar.
@Mitch Yes.
It's very Eurocentric.
@Mitch There is also levantin, even more outdated.
<handwaving> Somewhere beyond there, where there be dragons.
01:26
Languages arise is a particular place.
Levantine is an anagram of Valentine.
Not also how the location of the East moved westward during the Cold War, so the West and the East don't match with the Middle East etc.
@jlliagre makes it sound nice
@Cerberus Sometimes language serves to endorse or reinforce inequities in society; that sort of language can be considered morally objectionable. Of course, some people take this too far and expend far too much energy on language policing. But it's not inherently a bad thing to express moral opinions about language.
And that's why the Continent does not mean Antarctica.
01:28
Language sucks
The Middle East (term originally coined in English [see § Terminology]) is a geopolitical region encompassing the Arabian Peninsula, the Levant, Turkey, Egypt, Iran, and Iraq. The term came into widespread usage as a replacement of the term Near East (as opposed to the Far East) beginning in the early 20th century. The term "Middle East" has led to some confusion over its changing definitions, and being seen as too Eurocentric. The region includes the vast majority of the territories included in the closely associated definition of West Asia, but without the South Caucasus, and additionally includes...
For example, it used to be common to use "gay" as a more-or-less general purpose insult (see this ELU question); I think it's fairly obvious why one might think that there's a moral issue there.
@alphabet Sometimes; but that is usually no longer relevant once a word has become old and normal.
Well in all fairness to the Europeans, that -is- the direction of things.
@alphabet Eh I think that is a kind of on the fence.
01:30
I mean China calls themselves the middle kingdom...pretty self serving if you ask me
@Mitch At least your ancestors got one thing right.
@Mitch The US government did insist on "ISIL" rather than "ISIS," with "Levant" in place of "Syria." But presumably that's just an attempt at a more technically accurate translation.
@Mitch In the middle between the ocean and Central Asia.
Perfectly logical.
Does China still call itself that, by the way?
@Cerberus I'd say it's the exact opposite; entrenched inequities tend to be considered old, traditional, well-established, and often normalized.
@Cerberus which ancestors? I was born out of a shotgun shack on the shore of a south sea island the son of a barmaid and what at best is some lowlife pirate.
01:32
@alphabet Words lose such connotations with time.
It is not constructive to try and revive them.
@Mitch Not at the West Pole, it doesn't. There she blows.
@Mitch I'm sure you have some DNA of Genghis Khan and Charlemagne in you.
Those ancestors.
Mare Nostrum (; Latin: "Our Sea") was a Roman name for the Mediterranean Sea. In Classical Latin, it would have been pronounced [ˈma.rɛ ˈnɔs.t̪rʊ̃ː], and in Ecclesiastical Latin, it is pronounced [ˈmaː.rɛ ˈnɔs.t̪rum]. In the decades following the 1861 unification of Italy, Italian nationalists and Italian fascists who saw Italy as the successor state to the Roman Empire attempted to revive the term. == Roman usage == The term Mare Nostrum originally was used by the Ancient Romans to refer to the Tyrrhenian Sea after their conquest of Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica during the Punic Wars with Carthage...
@Cerberus of course it does. By all accounts it should be considered the center of the universe, mostly by center of mass of the people
What's the politically correct euphemism for Mare Nostrum these days?
You can't call it the Mediterranean Sea, of course. That's insensitive and mean.
01:35
@Mitch Shouldn't that centre lie closer to India?
@tchrist there longitude and latitude but why isn't there an attitude
@Cerberus It depends on the word and the connotation. I wouldn't say that the "gay" example is really an issue of connotations; it's just a straightforward expression of the attitude that gay = bad.
@Mitch There is where I live!
@Cerberus sometimes when I get on a horse I get the urge to pillage
@tchrist The subduction zone of the African plate?
01:37
@Cerberus That's all wet, eh.
@Mitch We all see that.
@tchrist I think so.
@Cerberus well yeah but it doesn't sound as good to say the center of population is 200km underneath Myanmar.
So, the Wet African Invasion.
@Mitch Burma.
They can only change their own language.
The Union for the Mediterranean (UfM; French: Union pour la Méditerranée, Arabic: الإتحاد من أجل المتوسط Al-Ittiḥād min ajl al-Mutawasseṭ) is an intergovernmental organization of 43 member states from Europe and the Mediterranean Basin: the 27 EU member states (including those not on the Mediterranean) and 16 Mediterranean partner countries from North Africa, Western Asia and Southern Europe. It was founded on 13 July 2008 at the Paris Summit for the Mediterranean, with an aim of reinforcing the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership (Euromed) that was set up in 1995 as the Barcelona Process. Its general...
@tchrist and their capital
Which is some unpronounceable noodle
Probably Korean
Nar Es Pewdipew
OMG
So close....
Nay Pyi Taw
01:42
Bharats are everywhere these days.
I would totally eat those if they were noodles
Even here.
Even here.
What the gentilic for Bharat? Can I pronounce it?
Don't sweat the 'h'
It'll just add bitterness
Unless you soak it in baking soda first
Oh you mean the possessive?
01:45
It's Bharatiya. The Russians can say it, but we cannot. Something about the first sound.
'of Bharat'
The gentilic is the nym for the demos.
Or were you brought up in Solomon's Temple?
In the case of words that have come to be seen as slurs, the underlying moral issue is usually that it's pointlessly unkind to call a person, or a group of people, something that they generally don't want to be called, within reason. Of course, the "within reason" part is important. But I think most would accept that it's wrong to be unkind unless it serves some good purpose.
@Mitch Maybe we could do a 3D centre.
And you have to pronounce it /bʱɑːɾt̪iːjᵊ/.
01:49
@tchrist Hmm unfortunate connotation.
@Cerberus I considered using the Wet African Under-ram.
Ram, how forceful.
Isn't it more like a root?
All the better to buck you with.
@tchrist oh. That's a good question.
Such insolence!
01:50
Jai Hind. Jai Bharat.
Rams are like that.
Gruff billies, all.
@Mitch Jai Hart.
@DannyuNDos If Russia should lose the war, I presume they would dissemble and say that they had not lost it.
And maintain the territory they had in 2021
And we all are in agreement that Russian should lose the war.
From 80% of the Rwanda Presidential elections votes counted, Paul Kagame got around 99.15%. An improvement over the 98.79% he got five years ago. That's the kind of leader we all need!
Losing for them means just not winning parts of Ukraine
01:55
@jlliagre It's very very hard to come that close without going over.
@tchrist that would an awesome leader.
But campaigning is not the same as governing
Gold plating is a method of depositing a thin layer of gold onto the surface of another metal, most often copper or silver (to make silver-gilt), by chemical or electrochemical plating. Plating refers to modern coating methods, such as the ones used in the electronics industry, whereas gilding is the decorative covering of an object with gold, which typically involve more traditional methods and much larger objects. == Gold plating chemistry == There are five recognized classes of gold plating chemistry: Alkaline gold cyanide, for gold and gold alloy plating Neutral gold cyanide, for high-purity...
I knew it!
> Gold plating is a method of depositing a thin layer of gold onto the surface of another metal, most often copper or silver (to make silver-gilt), by chemical or electrochemical plating.
Funny how we've forgotten that campaigning is what the legionnaires would do by summer.
@tchrist Oui. L'épaisseur d'une oreille à 150 mètres.
On wood I would call it gilding, I guess?
01:57
@Cerberus that doesn't rule out the possibility of doing it on wood
@jlliagre Pas même un pouce !
@Cerberus oh. Yeah maybe.
@Mitch It should!
It says another metal.
I feel like buildings that have a gold top are plated and not gilded
And chemical, which suggests not wood, too.
01:59
@Cerberus I would. That's what you call it when an illuminator lays down gold leaf upon the page, is it not?
@Cerberus sure the words imply that but...
@tchrist So I should think.
@tchrist yeah that's what I was thinking of
Gilt it is then.
So the answer to my starred question is, "no".
I wonder why it is called plated, by the way.
02:01
You do it to a plate?
It used to be with silver?
Silver leaf does not the gilt page make.
Oh. Gilt.
Like geld
No, the past and past participle of gild, silly.
Like your lily.
Gilding is a decorative technique for applying a very thin coating of gold over solid surfaces such as metal (most common), wood, porcelain, or stone. A gilded object is also described as "gilt". Where metal is gilded, the metal below was traditionally silver in the West, to make silver-gilt (or vermeil) objects, but gilt-bronze is commonly used in China, and also called ormolu if it is Western. Methods of gilding include hand application and gluing, typically of gold leaf, chemical gilding, and electroplating, the last also called gold plating. Parcel-gilt (partial gilt) objects are only gilded...
> 1.a.
Old English–
transitive. To cover (something) with a thin layer of gold or (in later use sometimes) an imitation of this; (in early use esp.) to cover with gold leaf; to decorate (an object, room, etc.) with gilding.

In quot. OE with reference to illumination of letters with gold leaf, but in a figurative context alluding to elegant language (cf. sense 2).
> 1791 [Johnson:] One of the rooms was gilt to a degree that I never saw before. —J. Boswell, Life of Johnson anno 1775 vol. I. 502
1806 Its magnificent owner..had gilt and furnished the apartments with a profusion of luxury. —R. Cumberland, Memoirs (1807) vol. I. 184
1815 Articles of iron or steel may..be instantly gilt by dipping them into this auriferous ether. —J. Smith, Panorama of Science & Art vol. II. 800
> 1611 Argenter, to siluer ouer; to gild, or couer with siluer. —R. Cotgrave, Dictionarie of French & English Tongues
argentify seems like a crude derivation.
> 5.
to gild over.
5.a.
1574–
transitive. To cover (something) with gilding, so as to conceal defects. Chiefly figurative and in figurative contexts.
> 1600 Your daies seruice at Shrewsbury, hath a little guilded ouer your nights exploit on Gadshill. —W. Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 2 i. ii. 150
> 1600 I will make fast the doores & guild my selfe with some mo ducats. —W. Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice ii. vi. 49
mo du cats?
> a1616 If he doe bleed, Ile guild the Faces of the Groomes withall, For it must seeme their Guilt. —W. Shakespeare, Macbeth (1623) ii. ii. 54
> a1616 Their Armours that march'd hence so siluer bright, Hither returne all gilt with Frenchmens blood. —W. Shakespeare, King John (1623) ii. i. 316
Apparently he was really into it.
> a1616 Trinculo is reeling ripe: where should they Finde this grand Liquor that hath gilded 'em. —W. Shakespeare, Tempest (1623) v. i. 283
> 1598 If a lie may do thee grace, Ile guild it with the happiest termes I haue. —W. Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 1 v. iv. 155
> 1594 The golden sunne..hauing gilt the Ocean with his beames, Gallops the Zodiacke. —W. Shakespeare, Titus Andronicus ii. i. 6
> to paint (or to gild) the lily: to embellish excessively, to add ornament where none is needed.
> a1616 To gilde refined Gold, to paint the Lilly; To throw a perfume on the Violet,..Is wastefull, and ridiculous excesse. —W. Shakespeare, King John (1623) iv. ii. 11
ALWAYS THAT GUY
> 1340 Þanne byeþ þe þri cornes of þe lilye wel y-gelt mid þe golde of charite. —Ayenbite (1866) 233
Back when mid still meant the preposition with.
@Robusto I just knew that Neal Katyal would have something to say about Cannon dissing the regs he wrote: nytimes.com/2024/07/15/opinion/…
I can't predict what SCOTUS will do, the same august body who just immunized the Crown from charges brought against Himself.
02:47
@Mitch then I don't think so. The Farsi word for 'corn' and sometimes 'popcorn' is ذرت [zorrat], but since vowels aren't normally visible in Farsi, it can also be read as [zirt], which is, sorta rude, impolite-ish, invoking a fart.
It has interesting use cases too. So if I don't like someone showing off, after they say something bragging about themselves, I can say "zirt", or "dzzzzz", which is kinda a middle finger
@M.A.R. Perhaps he meant an unrelated Persian word which sounds a bit like 'popcorn'?
@Cerberus nothing comes to mind, at least right now
OK.
@M.A.R. The latter a bit like "tsk" or "tsss" in English?
02:51
@Cerberus no, it's voicing literally a d and stretching the z sound a bit
It does not sound sibilant?
It does, if that's what you meant by being like 'tsss'
Yeah.
And I also meant how it's used, the general emotion or attitude expressed.
03:19
> The New York Times: "Russian forces have also recently pushed into New York"
2
03:46
@Cerberus it's basically a smirk with a verbal component, just a bit obscene
04:28
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06:39
The funniest English-to-Korean mondegreen effect ever:
 
1 hour later…
07:48
> Abdel-Ghaffar then used machine learning, a type of artificial intelligence, to predict the response of a second group of volunteers to the same images based solely on the stable tuning patterns in the occipital temporal cortex. He found that he could. news.berkeley.edu/2024/07/15/…
 
5 hours later…
12:39
@tchrist Yes, that was entirely an illegal move.
12:51
> "If there's another word for popcorn that you might know, it's not really used because it is considered impolite"
May 21, 2020 at 18:50, by Robusto
I think Spanish palomitas de maiz is much prettier than English popcorn.
@M.A.R. If you can't see that video short, she starts with پ ا پ ک و ر ن (sorry I can't get the ligatures right), but google translate gives ذرت بو داده which I suppose is your suggestion, right?
@Robusto but, arguably, pop corn sounds like more fun.
and even more arguably 'fart corn' is even moreso.
Sure, the writing could be confused, but frankly that's a bit uptight to think that 'zorrat' sounds enough like 'zirt' to be rude.
Google translate (or rather the gobs of training text that is online), ain't so serious.
13:23
@Mitch That does not comport well with the serious business of snack food.
@Robusto A middle manager at an advertising agency "We take fun seriously"
adds 1 hour of spontaneity to calendar
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orders a big mac, fries...uh supersize that... and a 32 oz diet coke
13:55
@Mitch Put a box of donut holes on the breakroom counter and send the message "Surprise!!!" on the office Slack channel.
Donut holes, the official snack food of people trying to make an event "fun."
14:11
@alphabet The surprise is that all the good ones are gone by the time you can get to it.
Which presumes that some donut holes are better than others, which is arguable.
It's like asking which of your children do love better. Of course you love them all equally, how can you ask something like that. I mean #3 should probably...
Mar 8, 2022 at 19:42, by Vikas
@Cerberus Horrible chain = Dominos, McDonalds, PizzaHut, SubWay, Pepsi, Coke?
@Vikas I finished season 3 of Panchayat. It's more serious than the 1st two seasons. (#2 finished serious though). But it maintains humor throughout.
@Mitch Nice.
@Vikas If you get a diet coke it makes the whole meal healthy.
I will need Amazon subscription to watch it.
14:18
@Vikas how did you see the other seasons?
@Mitch I had subscription then lol.
I will buy one month subscription once enough items to watch get queued on same platform (Amazon).
got it.
Same with Netflix.
@Vikas Are there ... 'cheaper' ways to get access to something like Panchayat?
@Mitch Torrent. But I never tried it for TV shows. Not even sure if Panchayat is available on Torrent.
14:20
i mean like wait a few months and it'll be on youtube?
@Mitch I don't think so.
If someone uploads it would be some illegal upload.
@Vikas I've never tried torrent... I usually just give up.
@Mitch In the age of AI and viruses, I also try to avoid it.
Oh I know what I do... I mention to my wife that I would like to see some show but it is not available on any service we have, and she juggles around the different services (we have more than one thing to watch on this one so we'll sign up, this one we don't watch anymore let's cancel), and then subscribes if there's more than 2 things.
That's how I eventually saw 'For All Mankind' (the alternate history of what if the space race accelerated during the Cold War when Russia landed on the Moon too.
14:43
Good idea.
15:19
Can mountains and hills be desert?
@Vikas "Desert" is anywhere that on average receives less than (the melted equivalent of) ten inches of water in precipitation annually. It can be much less than that. This includes not just the typical lowlands but also the polar tundra and various other sorts of terrain. It is uncommon but hardly impossible for mountains to also be desert.
@tchrist Ah. I used to think desert === dunes/sand with very low vegetation and rain lol
You mean scarce vegetation or sparse vegetation, not short vegetation, right? :) See also cryptobiotic crust.
Most deserts are full of life.
They just have less of it than tropical jungles.
In hot deserts, you won't see as much animal life during the daylight hours.
15:36
@tchrist Yeah sparse.
@tchrist There is desert in my neigbour state. There is sparse vegetation, but animals like deers can be found. Also snakes, camels etc.
The Thar Desert, also known as the Great Indian Desert, is an arid region in the north-western part of the Indian subcontinent that covers an area of 200,000 km2 (77,000 sq mi) in India and Pakistan. It is the world's 18th-largest desert, and the world's 9th-largest hot subtropical desert. About 85% of the Thar Desert is in India, and about 15% is in Pakistan. The Thar Desert is about 4.56% of the total geographical area of India. More than 60% of the desert lies in the Indian state of Rajasthan; the portion in India also extends into Gujarat, Punjab, and Haryana. The portion in Pakistan extends...
I expected better response from Copilot 🤣
Not owner though. CEO*
15:58
@Mitch The jelly-filled Munchkins are the worst.
Why does Dunkin sell Boston Creme donuts, but not Boston Creme Munchkins? They've turned their backs on their home state.
Wait I Googled it and they just started selling them
Why do they spell it "Kreme"?
Boston Kreme donuts are the only food associated with this city that isn't utterly disgusting.
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16:34
Word of the day: muktuk. "A traditional food of Inuit and other circumpolar peoples, consisting of whale skin and blubber."
Sounds delicious.
17:29
@alphabet By 'worst' I think you mean 'awesome! (just not as good as the more awesomer ones).
But yeah I know what you mean, they aren't the best. Like the cinnamon sugar munchkins. They're the last ones to go.
@alphabet Everybody complains about all they ever do in the news is publish bad things, how everything is falling apart, and we're all gonna die. Or worse, we're the ones who are -not- gonna die and be left with all the shit.
This is one news item for which we can all lift our heads up and smile again.
@alphabet Boston Creme Pie? awesome.
Boston Baked Beans? not awesome.
Boston Lobster roll? a) I know, not really Boston but it's area-ly known. b) a sandwich made of mayonnaise, a schpritz of lobster essence, and another layer of mayonnaise? Not awesome.
Charles River Trout? a) doesn't exist b) if it did exist, it would have two heads and dine on mercury and radial tires. Not awesome (but there's no accounting for taste).
Sam Adams Beer? If you like yeast piss, like any patriotic Bruins fan, then sure, go for it.
Is there any other food that Boston is known for?
Yankee Pot Roast? I have to admit, awesome for me, but not for the ...um... donor.
18:03
@Mitch But Yankee Swap? The absolute worst. For people who hate gift-giving and other people.
18:22
@Mitch Just don't ask how they're manufactured. I assume the ingredients are produced by migrant child laborers getting exposed to toxic industrial chemicals or what have you.
@alphabet Since when do raccoons worry about such things? I think they chow down on whatever they can get.
@Robusto It's not like we're paying them for it.
I thought you paid in cuteness.
@Robusto There is no ethical consumption under capitalism, doncha know?
@alphabet You've shown this one before. I think this may be the single instance of raccoons being [awwww!] cute.
18:35
@Robusto We prefer "majestic."
That said, the US has around 300 million humans and about 10 million raccoons. So we should be getting one doughnut for every thirty given to humans. Somehow I doubt that we are achieving that level of equality.
This is why we engage in bold direct-action protests.
18:50
#WhenTaken #140 (16.07.2024)

I scored 939/1000 🎉

1️⃣ 📍 28.6 metres - 🗓️ 3 yrs - ⚡ 197 / 200
2️⃣ 📍 809.7 metres - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 200 / 200
3️⃣ 📍 2 km - 🗓️ 5 yrs - ⚡ 195 / 200
4️⃣ 📍 1035 km - 🗓️ 8 yrs - ⚡ 158 / 200
5️⃣ 📍 352 km - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 189 / 200

https://whentaken.com
19:15
@Robusto How about a new tradition, Yankee I-showed-up-to-work-here-leave-me-out-of-your-made-up-scandinavian-potlatch Bullshit?
What you do is you walk into a room of people starting up on a Yankee Swap and you mutter under your breath what utter bullshit and then leave.
That's a real fun tradition.
One year I think I dodged a bullet... I almost had a 'Duck Dynasty' board game but got swapped out for hot sauce.
@alphabet Dunkin Donuts: we have lovely employees who spread diabetes across all species.
@alphabet There's strawberry-filled and strawberry-jelly... one of those I detest and the other is awesome. But I can't remember which.
#WhenTaken #140 (16.07.2024)

I scored 871/1000 🎉

1️⃣ 📍 218 km - 🗓️ 7 yrs - ⚡ 183 / 200
2️⃣ 📍 18542 km - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 100 / 200
3️⃣ 📍 5 km - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 200 / 200
4️⃣ 📍 118 km - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 195 / 200
5️⃣ 📍 199 km - 🗓️ 0 yrs - ⚡ 193 / 200

https://whentaken.com
@Robusto Too bad I completely fail on #2 location. I had 4 years right!
@jlliagre Good job. Yeah, I totally lucked out on #2 location. That alone was probably the difference between our scores.
19:54
@Cerberus I missed that. DEI is Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. It's extra job training to remind people that it is uncool to sexually harass others or call them slurs or other awful things. To people who already don't do these things it is annoying because it is an hour out of your life telling you how to be nice (but also how not to give any compliments whatsoever ever).
To those who have done those things it is annoying because they don't get why what they did is wrong cause nobody got physically hurt.
Conservatives love to bash DEI. Liberals are scared to say it might be a little much.
Yeah, Trump didn't "take a bullet for this country." He's never done anything for anyone but himself.
20:57
@Mitch music, weird, optic, pagan, civil.
oops, strike pagan. organ.
21:10
@Mitch butch, liege, aorta, condo, fetus.
21:36
Wordle 1,124 4/6

⬛⬛⬛⬛🟨
🟨🟨⬛🟨⬛
🟨⬛🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
@Mitch shave itchy clump goofy proof
@Mitch manly widow fetus flack flush <<< this is the one
@Mitch The good news, for those who dislike it, is that nobody pays any attention to those presentations.
@Robusto Good to know that, if Biden were the one who'd been shot at, she'd have switched parties immediately.
Also, does it really count as "taking a bullet" if the bullet never actually went inside of you?
21:55
Daily Octordle #904
9️⃣🔟
🟥3️⃣
🕚🕐
🟥4️⃣
Score: 78
@alphabet counts as taking it, then leaving it
> public polls over the last four months found Biden’s lead had winnowed to just 8 points across New York — an unusually narrow gap in a state where Democrats outnumber Republicans 2 to 1.
In the last 4 elections, Democrats won the state by more than 20 points. This bodes rather poorly.
Daily Sequence Octordle #904
3️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣🔟
🕚🕛
🕐⓮
Score: 76
 
2 hours later…
23:51
Hello to everyone. I am so impressed! Our StackExchange is so beautiful! Is discussion of politics totally permitted here? Just wonder.
@alphabet Of course.
Daily Octordle #904
4️⃣5️⃣
🕚6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
🔟9️⃣
Score: 60
Daily Sequence Octordle #904
4️⃣6️⃣
7️⃣8️⃣
9️⃣🔟
🕚🕛
Score: 67
00:00 - 01:0001:00 - 00:00

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