Timsup2nothin
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2013
- Messages
- 46,737
That's nothing. In the US it is common as dirt to name a bar "Carrie Nation's"
http://www.carrienationcocktailclub.com/
One in Boston does not 'common as dirt' make. It is pretty clever.
That's nothing. In the US it is common as dirt to name a bar "Carrie Nation's"
http://www.carrienationcocktailclub.com/
One in Boston does not 'common as dirt' make. It is pretty clever.
I don't get the reference, I'm afraid.
Remember that you have to get yourself ordained as a Protestant minister in order to forestall future evictions.TIL that Johnnie Walker, of whisky fame, was a lifelong teetotaler.
When two of the major pillars of your national culture are distilled spirits and Calvinism, I suppose something like that is bound to happen.
I totally missed the Wikipedia link and went to the bar's website instead.![]()
Vernard Sands was sitting on a plastic crate at NE 79th Street and Miami Court in Little River on November 11, 2016, when a Miami Police car rolled up. The cops told the 35-year-old homeless man he was breaking the law — by illegally sitting on a crate. Then, a cop identified in police reports as Officer Mclean cuffed Sands, charged him with "unlawful use of a dairy case," a misdemeanor, and took him to jail. Sands spent the night behind bars, all because he had been sitting on a crate.
To clarify, Johnnie Walker wasn't a famous teetotaler who has a whisky named after him; he founded the company.That's nothing. In the US it is common as dirt to name a bar "Carrie Nation's"
http://www.carrienationcocktailclub.com/
To clarify, Johnnie Walker wasn't a famous teetotaler who has a whisky named after him; he founded the company.
Related, TIL that Johnny Walker's grandson, Sir Alexander Walker II, was a vehement anti-Semite. A Scottish Presbyterian finding the time to invest in conspiracy theories that aren't about the Catholic Church is almost stranger than a teetotaler become a whisky blender.
I've encountered more American Jews in Scotland than I have Scottish Jews, so unless there was some great tartan Aliyah in the fifties that nobody ever bothers to mention, I can't imagine there would have been.Are there enough Jews in Scotland for anyone to bother to get worked up over?
My favorite Swiss pop singer Francine Jordi contracted cancer last April. Her website and the news stories about her are all in German, so I can't tell how she's doing now.
There was the Scottish Presbyterian who basically invented the whole conspiracy theory about Easter being named after a made-up goddess. I don't think that counts as "Catholic", does it?A Scottish Presbyterian finding the time to invest in conspiracy theories that aren't about the Catholic Church is almost stranger than a teetotaler become a whisky blender.
My favorite Swiss pop singer Francine Jordi contracted cancer last April. Her website and the news stories about her are all in German, so I can't tell how she's doing now.
The alleged culprit for that is usually Bede, isn't it? "A Benedictine monk did it" slots pretty readily into a broader structure of "Catholics did it".There was the Scottish Presbyterian who basically invented the whole conspiracy theory about Easter being named after a made-up goddess. I don't think that counts as "Catholic", does it?
She answered in June this year on stage on the question how thing were going with excellent and that she was grateful.
He used a misreading of a dubious passage in Bede to bolster his opinion, yes.The alleged culprit for that is usually Bede, isn't it? "A Benedictine monk did it" slots pretty readily into a broader structure of "Catholics did it".
That is consistent with my experience of Presbyterians discussing Catholicism, yes.The first post was kind of a joke. Hislop's book is violently anti-Catholic. It's just that it is almost literally all made up, and the things that are semi-sensical are the things that don't have anything to do with Catholicism in the real world.