On Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 11:00 PM, ornamentalmind
<[email protected]> wrote:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-Y_Jelly

"Hee Haw, hee haw, hee hawwwww!!!"

dj

>
> On Mar 8, 8:36 pm, Don Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Hicks are hicks no matter how far south or north you are.  If you live
>> in the woods and take a dirt road once a week to get groceries and
>> pick up mail and have the equivalent of a 7th grade education you're a
>> hick.  Not necessarily stupid by any means but a hick just the same.
>> I imagine there must be part of Montana or the Dakotas that have areas
>> like this.  Or the northern parts of the Appalachian Mountains.
>>
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tqxzWdKKu8&feature=player_embedded#
>>
>> dj
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 6:42 AM, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> > On 5 Mar, 17:28, Don Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> On Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Pat <[email protected]> 
>> >> wrote:
>>
>> >> > On 5 Mar, 16:01, ornamentalmind <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> >> Illiteracy appears to be on the decline:
>>
>> >> >>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literacy
>>
>> >> >> Sometimes a visual is interesting too.
>>
>> >> >>http://www.mapsofworld.com/thematic-maps/world-illiteracy-map.htm
>>
>> >> >> Of course, the USA has its issues.
>>
>> >> >>http://www.caliteracy.org/rates/
>>
>> >> > That reminds me of a time when my father had mentioned to a work
>> >> > colleague from Alabama that "the South has the highest illiteracy rate
>> >> > in the country."  And the guy responded by holding out his hand (as if
>> >> > to shake my father's hand) and saying, "Put 'er there!"  Implying that
>> >> > he didn't understand that it was NOT a compliment, thus proving the
>> >> > point.  My father had to really restrain himself from bursting out
>> >> > laughing at the poor bloke.
>>
>> >> Sounds to me like Southern humor.  I might just respond in kind after
>> >> a random insult to The Land Of My Birth.  Especially if it came from
>> >> some Damn Yankee or even worse, a hoity toity Englishman.  We don't
>> >> mind insults but it goes down better when delivered with a smile.
>> >> Even if it's true.
>>
>> >> dj
>>
>> > Whilst I DO understand what you mean, this person was the kind that
>> > would say, "last time I clumb up a tree...", so, I think it was more
>> > of a lack of understanding than anything else.  How do you classify
>> > Missourians, as they're not so Northern as to be 'Yankee', but not too
>> > Southern either?  Perhaps, "That gol-durn stubborn lot just northa
>> > Arkansas".  ;-)
>>
>> >> >> Other 
>> >> >> sources:https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/21...
>>
>> >> >> And, it is obvious that definitions affect all such reporting.
>>
>> >> >> On Mar 5, 5:37 am, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >> >> > On 4 Mar, 02:02, Molly <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >> >> > > "If the novel goes the way of live theater – a medium appealing to
>> >> >> > > only a small, relatively rarefied segment of the population – 
>> >> >> > > what, if
>> >> >> > > anything, will be lost?  What can a novel do for us that other art
>> >> >> > > forms can’t?”
>>
>> >> >> > >http://siobhancurious.wordpress.com/2010/03/02/encountering-the-other...
>>
>> >> >> > > What do you think?
>>
>> >> >> > I don't think it's likely to go away.  In fact, the newer concepts of
>> >> >> > e-books are more likely to fade away than pen-on-paper due to the
>> >> >> > potential for electronic sabotage.  Whilst Great Libraries (like
>> >> >> > Alexandria) may burn and destroy many instances of great works, the
>> >> >> > concept of writing won't fade unless the entire species is wiped out,
>> >> >> > as even most illiterates know about writing and, given a crises, may
>> >> >> > re-develop it, as illiteratacy doesn't, of necessity, imply
>> >> >> > uneducability or lack of intelligence.  Heck, we still have The Epic
>> >> >> > of Gilgamesh (an example of a very old 'novel') written in cuneiform
>> >> >> > on clay tablets, and that's lasted for thousands of years.
>>
>> >> >> > Even human extinction may not wipe out literature from the Earth, as
>> >> >> > it may pave the way for other species to evolve and create their own.
>> >> >> > It would be interesting to hear the tales written by intellectual
>> >> >> > insects: The Story of the Lazy Bee; The Emperor Moth's Post-Pupate
>> >> >> > Clothes; 50 Ways to Kill You Lover by B. Widow and P. Mantis.  The
>> >> >> > list goes on...- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> >> >> - Show quoted text -
>>
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