---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <anartaxius@...> wrote:
Richard, I think we got our signals crossed. I was thinking of the quote Judy originally made about not discussing anything with me, and Judy was probably thinking of the quote she subsequently made when she responded to me (where she tried to worm around not being able to respond to me without lying by 'commenting' on what I wrote), so the 'best' interpretation is we both misconstrued the specific item each thought the other was referring to. I rather like her not being able to respond to me directly because then she has to act just like Barry does when he mentions her, she takes on Barry's method of tangential interaction, modeling her adversary in form and style, for as she considers him the most nefarious of liars, voilá, Nothing could be more ironic (in the sense that this is a state of affairs that is the reverse of what was desired). Judy has become the very image of her nemesis, except perhaps she has no heart at all, whereas Barry shows definite signs of normal humanness when not confronting Judy. Judy's snarkiness, as you put it, seems to be a well defined character trait she has that Barry does not have. That does not mean Barry is Mr. Nice with a halo by comparison, he can grind people's heads to powder with the best of them (that is a reference to Krishna in the BG by the way). Barry is an emotional, intellectual and socially inept slob. I recall you posting a number of items with Classical orchestras. Here is one of my favorite pieces: http://youtu.be/qPl2LUq-vpw http://youtu.be/qPl2LUq-vpw ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <punditster@...> wrote: On 2/24/2014 8:31 AM, anartaxius@... mailto:anartaxius@... wrote: So the statement above that I quoted the wrong quote is a direct unvarnished lie, unless you admit to having made a mistake. > So, let's set the record straight: which is the correct quote?