Random Thoughts XII - Floccinaucinihilipilification

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I’m on my phone and sometimes the browser window just gives up the ghost. I close it, open a new one, and it works again.

It’s like each window only has so much energy and it needs a rest once in a while.
 
To quote The IT Crowd, have you tried turning it off and then on again?
 
Try to identify who these two are. Spoiler has the answer ;)

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Spoiler :
The bass player from Nirvana and the lead guitarist from Soundgarden. Yes, they are ancient now.
 
Try to identify who these two are. Spoiler has the answer ;)

View attachment 637922

Spoiler :
The bass player from Nirvana and the lead guitarist from Soundgarden. Yes, they are ancient now.
Yeah, man, I can hardly believe it's already 2017...
 
Thinking I might get involved in a political campaign for the first time. The voter base for a party here has halved, so the margin for leadership votes is much narrower and more impactful now. Our premier is stepping down so whoever wins the leadership race will take over, and I'm not jazzed about the current frontrunner. He talks nice but his actual results show empty, broken promises. His competition seems inexperienced, but maybe it's worth a gamble. It'd just cost $10 to become a member and then vote.
 
I think you might have weed on the brain, Samson. ;)
 
Thinking I might get involved in a political campaign for the first time. The voter base for a party here has halved, so the margin for leadership votes is much narrower and more impactful now. Our premier is stepping down so whoever wins the leadership race will take over, and I'm not jazzed about the current frontrunner. He talks nice but his actual results show empty, broken promises. His competition seems inexperienced, but maybe it's worth a gamble. It'd just cost $10 to become a member and then vote.
From the opening sentences I thought you'd actively campaign for someone :D
 
Possibly in the Devil's salad? :mischief:
 
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Hardly my fault that the forum glitched at the precise moment I posted!
 
The good thing with having a diary is that you can instantly go 5, 10 or more years back, reading what you were doing then.
I was just observing the situation 7,5 years ago, roughly half a year before the publication of a book of mine.
 
The good thing with having bizarre turns in one's mental organization, is that you can be living in a vast arena - or, to use a phrase by a rather strange author, "larger than 10.000 cathedrals" - and act as if there is only a cell.
Of course that's also the bad thing. Nothing to gain from living in a cell.
 
Chock Full o' Nuts is an odd name for a brand of coffee, because 1) it isn't true and 2) one wouldn't want it to be.
 
Nobody is "on relief" anymore. I suppose it conjures up images of sepia-toned dust bowlers looking pensively at their dirt farms.
 
You can thank Earl Butts, Nixon, and the wheat embargo for that. Once the pretense of free market was dropped for using us as political pawns, we stopped calling it The Dole and started farming The Program.

The lion's share of which is still whatever food stamps are called wherever one happens to be. So I guess it should conjure up images of single moms checking out with carts full of pasta?
 
Chock Full o' Nuts is an odd name for a brand of coffee, because 1) it isn't true and 2) one wouldn't want it to be.
And now the rest of the story....

History[edit]​

The chain was founded by William Black, who sold nuts in Times Square to theater-goers. In 1926, he opened a store on Broadway and 43rd Street, eventually adding 17 more. When the Depression settled in, New Yorkers could no longer afford the luxury of shelled nuts, so Black converted his shops into lunch counters, selling coffee and sandwiches.[1]

Their signature "nutted cheese" sandwich, made of cream cheese and chopped nuts on dark raisin bread, cost a nickel with a cup of coffee when the company was founded. When coffee prices went up in the 1950s, Black, like other restaurateurs, held to a five cent cup of coffee by watering it down.[2] But he soon broke ranks and raised the price, announcing that he refused to compromise on quality.

In 1953, the coffee brand was introduced to supermarkets. Several years later baseball star Jackie Robinson became the company's vice president and director of personnel, after retiring from the game.[3][4] In 1961, Chock full o'Nuts introduced a brand of instant coffee.

Within that decade the chain had approximately 80 restaurants in the New York City area. Hygiene was a selling point, with the sandwiches advertised as "untouched by human hands". Cooks used tongs to assemble them.

In 1974, Chock full o'Nuts purchased Rheingold Brewery.[5] In the 1970s, the lunch counters gradually closed. After Black died, the company sold its remaining 17 restaurants to the restaurant company Riese Bros. In 1988, investor Martin D. Gruss and the companies he controlled purchased a ten percent stake in the Chock full o'Nuts Corporation, saying he might seek control of the company.[6] In 1993, Chock Express stores were introduced.

The Sara Lee Corporation purchased Chock full o'Nuts for $238 million in 1999.[7][8] In May 2006, it was purchased from Sara Lee by Massimo Zanetti Beverage USA, along with the MJB, Hills Bros., and Chase & Sanborn coffee brands.

On September 10, 2010, the company announced it was returning to the lunch counter business by opening its first store in almost 30 years, on West 23rd Street between Broadway and 6th Avenue in Manhattan. The company said it planned to add stores and kiosks in New York City serving the "nutted cheese" sandwich and other traditional Chock full O'Nuts menu items (plus new choices).[9] The youngest franchise owner in the years after the comeback was Corey Torjesen of Staten Island, New York, who opened a Chock full O'Nuts franchise, at the age of 19, with money he had earned from a newspaper route.[10] The 23rd Street store closed in 2012. As of 2019, six stores branded as Chock full o'Nuts Cafés were in operation, including two locations in Brooklyn, and one in each of Elizabeth and Fort Lee, New Jersey; Middletown, New York; and Miami, Florida.[11]

To assure those with allergies to nuts, the company began adding the slogan "NO NUTS! 100% Coffee" to its packaging in the 2000s. (The coffee blend itself has never contained nuts.)
 
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