Oh, c'mon, if it's not justified when Trump does it, it's not justified when others do it, either.
You're just mad because you're not pretty enough to get a free pass.
Oh, c'mon, if it's not justified when Trump does it, it's not justified when others do it, either.
The Beatles?They looked good in short skirts....
And yet in the 1990s you lot -for some reason- mistook the Spice Girls as talented, fashionable musicians, and managed to deepen the hurt already started by the Beatles.
Ah yes, we all know how prestigious British, German, Scandinavian, and Russian restaurants are.This hierarchy, which privileges paninis over tortas, is almost completely shaped by a simple rule: The more capital or military power a nation wields and the richer its emigrants are, the more likely its cuisine will command high menu prices.
Here's a thought: maybe that reflects more the sensibilities of Zagat reviewers who select the restaurants to list. Not necessarily the rest of the US.Ray’s analysis in The Ethnic Restaurateur is not just based on subjective assessments of a cuisine’s influence and reputation. To great effect, he draws on data from Zagat, whose reviewers collect check prices for meals at the restaurants it lists (which tend to range from middlebrow to the lower end of high-end); in New York in 2015, the average check at a Zagat-listed Japanese restaurant for a meal for one (including a glass of wine and a tip) was $68.94, while the average price for the same thing at Zagat-listed Chinese restaurants was $35.76.
I wonder what the Acadians have to say about that...The fact that large numbers of poor French immigrants never settled in large portions of the U.S.
Obviously that's all about racial privilege. It certainly couldn't have been due to research showing that high intakes of dairy and meat is unhealthy.In the 1930s, Ray told me, emigrants from Japan found that their children would return home from their new schools parroting their teachers, who had given them the idea that “American” food—dairy, cheese, and meat, mostly—was instrumental to growing up big and strong. Many parents embraced that notion. “Now, it's completely flipped,” Ray says. “Now we think, of course, the Japanese live the longest, eat the best food."
A week ago, I stubbed the big toe on my right foot. Yesterday, I stubbed the toe next to it.
I'll keep you all posted on whether the trend continues, though I should think that stubbing my middle toe might prove physically difficult, since one of the previously stubbed toes would be more likely to meet with most objects first.
I'm not sure that the Founding Fathers were thinking of future holidays when they signed the Declaration of Independence, Arakhor.
" The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shews, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more."
- John Adams to Abigail Adams, July 3rd, 1776.
My credit friggin card that I don't use very often wants me to use online rather than paper. But I cannot log on online because their idiot friggin security questions won't let me update my password. If I don't remember the goddamned answers to the obscure questions, then I am locked out forever, and there's not a damned thing I can do about it.