Archive for September, 2008

September 29, 2008

Monday, September 29th, 2008
Really Good Quotes  "A mind, once expanded by a new idea, never returns to its original dimensions." - Oliver Wendell Holmes
Subscribe to RGQ Unsubscribe from RGQ Submit Reader Comment Submit 15 Minutes of Fame Submit Image or Quote Submit to Best of RGQ Submit Tip of the Day Submit Limerick
Submit Photo View Reader Photos


Greetings, Quotaholics:

When I was young we were raised to believe that if you did something wrong you should be prepared to face the punishment.

In later years, I remember a comedian who said that if you ever found yourself on trial you should just say I’m sorry. “I’m sorry. I didn’t know that killing someone was wrong.” Sort of like saying “I’m sorry I broke your economy. Give me some more money and I’ll fix it”.

Then at some point it became acceptable to blame someone else when you had done something wrong. I remember an occasion when my step-daughter was in trouble for something and she told my wife “You never taught me any better”. Needless to say my wife went off with a force that would solve our energy problems if you could harness it!

But this seems to be the prevailing attitude these days. If you get in trouble, blame everyone else.

A recent article on MSNBC told of a woman who had allowed her 14 year old daughter to starve to death. The child, who had cerebral palsy, died two years ago from malnutrition and maggot-infested bedsores.

The mother, Andrea Kelly, has been charged with murder. The father, Daniel Kelly, did not live with the girl but is charged with child endangerment.

In a move that has outraged prosecutors the parents have sued the city, alleging that dangerous and reckless actions by several municipal employees and contract workers contributed to the girl’s death. The wrongful death suit, filed earlier this month, seeks reimbursement for medical bills, funeral costs and other expenses.

“Lawyers said they filed the suit to protect the interests of the victim’s siblings.”

“‘The parents are not seeking any money from this,’ attorney Brian Mildenberg said. ‘The potential beneficiaries are the brothers and sisters and the parents, but the parents may be disqualified by a conviction or a civil finding of abandonment.’”

“‘I think it’s an obscenity. I cannot imagine that people in that situation who did what they did to their own daughter are attempting to profit from it,’ Assistant District Attorney Ed McCann, head of the city’s homicide unit, told the Philadelphia Daily News.”

Another case of blaming everyone else, right?

Maybe not. A timeline of the case printed in the Philadelphia Inquirer, seems to point to severe problems with the Department of Human Services and MultiEthnic Behavioral Health Inc. a contract company hired to look after the family.

The Philadelphia District Attorney has now filed charges against 7 DHS and MultiEthnic employees in connection with the death. A second lawsuit has also been filed on behalf of some 28,000 other children who have at one time been under DHS supervision.

So where does the blame really lay? Surely the mother, who in the end was the one who starved the girl, is guilty. But what about the people who’s job it is to protect children? When they fail to do their jobs properly are they guilty of murder too? Do they just get a slap on the hand and go on to their next job where they might repeat their poor job performance?

With the inadequate funding most state agencies get and the poor pay, should it come as any surprise that the employees perform poorly?

Sadly,


Isn’t it worth $1 a month to you to keep RGQ going?  Please click the link and direct your contribution to reallygoodquotes@yahoo.com.


Today's Quotes


“All men are equal before fish.” - Herbert Hoover


“A Book of quotations can never be complete.” - Robert A. Hamilton

Today's Chuckle

Especially for Tim
[Thanks to Bonnie in Louisiana]

The computer in my high school classroom recently started acting up. After watching me struggle with it, one of my students came up and took over.

"Your hard drive crashed," he said.

I called the computer services office and explained, "My computer is down. The hard drive crashed."

"We can’t just send people down on your say so. How do you know that’s the problem?"

"A student told me," I answered.

"We’ll send someone over right away."

Life Sentences

“No public character has ever stood the revelation of private utterance and correspondence.” - Lord John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, English historian (1834-1902)

“There is no error so monstrous that it fails to find defenders among the ablest men.” - John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton, English historian (1834-1902)

“Education is the key to unlock the golden door of freedom.” - George Washington Carver, American horticulturist, chemist and educator (1864-1943)

Image'n That
Cat Burglar
Imp-Revised News

E-Mail the Imp


Salad Greens to be nuked! That could have been the headline for an article that was actually titled, “Is it Mutant or Health Food?” The article explains that the Food and Drug Administration has just authorized the irradiation of Iceberg Lettuce and Spinach to kill E. coli bacteria and any other less than desirable critters.

The practice of irradiating food has been ongoing for several years, starting as far back as 1986. There are several types of irradiation processes; ionization irradiation, gamma irradiation, and X-ray irradiation. All are used to kill pathogens and have been used for some time to safeguard meat, poultry, shell fish, and spices.

In addition to killing pathogens, other applications for irradiation include sprout inhibition, delay of ripening, increase of juice yield, and improvement of re-hydration. It’s extremely valuable in processing military field rations, back packers meals, and survival rations. Properly processed, packaged, and stored, these irradiated foods can have a shelf life up to ten years.

Almost every country that uses irradiation to safeguard food and food products has different regulations concerning the type of irradiation to use in certain circumstances, and the strength of the radiation that can be used. Some countries authorize their use with no regulations at all. Consumers have been reluctant to accept irradiated food products that they know about, but since there is no requirement to label irradiated food, most of us have consumed some without even knowing it.

Since it can kill pathogens, retard or delay ripening, and make fruits juicier, it would seem that almost everything we grow would go through the irradiation process. But most U.S. irradiation facilities treat medical products, and only a handful are set up for food. That means processors would have to pay to ship produce hundreds of miles to be irradiated, losing precious shelf life in the process. Food makers could build irradiation facilities, but they’d cost millions of dollars, a big bet for a technology that’s been largely shunned by consumers.

In the past three years we’ve destroyed thousands of tons of ground beef…that’s a lot of beef to lose because of contamination that could have been controlled with a little bit of “zapping”. I’d love to know how many tons of beef go to waste after it gets to markets. Once it’s thawed and packaged it only has a day or two to be sold and then it’s trashed. If irradiation could save half of that scrapped meat, prices would go down.

With world population expanding, and third world countries increasingly facing starvation, it would seem that processes for preserving food, particularly meat proteins, would be a life saver. Imagine instead if those several thousands of tons of ground beef we tossed because of contamination could have been freeze dried, irradiated, and packaged for distribution by the UN. How many lives could have been saved from starvation?

I’ve noticed that there are increasing numbers of vacuum sealed meat products at my supermarket. Slabs of ribs, pork loins, slabs of uncut steak, and rolls of chopped meat vacuum packed and refrigerated last a fairly long time. If they were also irradiated, they could probably stay fresh for months. I’m all for irradiation. If food doesn’t spoil as quickly, the supermarket’s overhead goes down and prices drop. I’m all for irradiation.

Maybe science will find a frequency for electronic radiation or a type of radiation from super novas that when applied to humans will extend our life. Imagine a kiosk that you can step into when you’re sick, feed it a dollar and it zaps you with beneficial radiation killing all your viruses. It would be a cross between a microwave oven and a photo booth…you could even walk out with a chest X-Ray as a bonus.

The Bad Sied 

Most Embarrassing or Scary Moment


Speak Up!

Speak right up!

Patti's Parenthetical Past

On this day in history,
September 29, 1954: The European Organization for Nuclear Research is established when their charter is ratified by the 12 founding Member States. Already functioning as a provisional body, they were now globally recognized. After WWII, Europe’s place as a bastion for scientific research was losing ground. In December 1949 the first proposal for a united European scientific community was set forth. French, Italian, and Danish scientists called for a cohesive unit to merge not only findings, but funding.

The French name for the group was Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nulcéaire or CERN. The pure physics research of the day concerned the study of the insides of the atom, hence "nuclear." In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee developed a distributed information system for CERN. His boss called the system "vague, but exciting" so work continued on the infant system. Berners-Lee saw his fledgling system as a way for scientists around the globe to share news. By Christmas 1990 a new little idea was blossoming across the planet. The World Wide Web was emerging. Tweaks and debugging, refinement of systems, hardware upgrades and by 1994 there were 10,000 servers and 10 million users on the web.

Today, the world’s premiere scientific researchers still hold physics as their fundamental basis for study. They wish only to find out what the Universe is made of and how it works. There are now 20 Member States (all European) with many non-European countries also involved. CERN employs 2,500 people who build and design the accelerators as well as help with the running of scientific experiments. About 8,000 visiting scientists (half the world’s particle physicists), come to CERN for their research. They represent 580 universities and 85 nationalities. CERN is located on the Switzerland-France border – literally.



"Equipped with his five senses, man explores the universe around him and calls the adventure Science." - Edwin Powell Hubble



"Nature composes some of her loveliest poems for the microscope and the telescope." - Theodore Roszak



"If we wish to make a new world we have the material ready. The first one, too, was made out of chaos." - Robert Quillen


Kids' Weird Words, The Date from Hell, How I Met My Mate
Kirsten's Krazy Kaleidoscope

Email Kirsten

“We worry about what a child will become tomorrow, yet we forget that he is someone today.”
~ Stacia Tauscher ~

It seemed like a good idea at the time. The powers that be in Nebraska decided that if new parents were gonig to abandon their babies, they should be able to so without putting the babies at risk. They wanted to provide an alternative to people planning to dump their kids in stairwells or parking garages. So they enacted a law which would allow overwhelmed parents to “abandon” their children in hospitals. The parents would not be charged with abandoning their children, and the babies would be in a safe place where they would be cared for. What was not bargained for was a loophole in Nebraska law that extended this “safe haven” law to all children under the age of 19.

The results, while unintended, have probably not been very surprising. People fed up with their wayward teenagers have been taking them to hospitals, saying they don’t want to care for them anymore. I can’t help wondering what the teenagers think of all this. I mean, what do their parents tell them? I can just picture the conversation:
“Mom, where are we going?”
“Oh, we’re going to the grocery store, and on the way back I’m going to abandon you at the hospital.”
“Can I take my Playstation?”

Since Nebraska’s Safe Haven law was enacted in July, fourteen children, including seven teenagers, have been ditched at hospitals. In the most extreme case, a father walked into a hospital and left behind nine of his ten children, ranging in age from 1 to 17. The childrens’ mother had died shortly after the birth of the baby, and the father stated that he felt overwhelmed by the challenge of single parenting. The kids have been split up, with the older four going to an emergency shelter and the rest going to a foster home. Apparently, they are “struggling” to come to terms with what has happened to them.

Well, duh. Did anyone think they’d be OK with it?

To say that child abandonment is a bad thing would be a bit like saying that Hitler was a tad aggressive. Sometimes it’s not right to judge someone who adandons their kids, though. It all depends on the circumstances. If a couple of rich people leave their child in a dumpster so they can walk away and continue their cocaine habit, they should absolutely be taken to task for it. But if a seventeen-year-old single mom with no money, no support, no job, and no place to live leaves her child on the steps of a church, well, maybe she thinks she’s doing the right thing.

I am all for a law that allows overwhelmed parents to leave their child in a safe place if they truly do not feel they can provide their children with the physical and emotional essentials of life. On the other hand, I see a huge problem with a law that allows parents to dump their children simply because they are inconvenienced by the responsibilities of parenting.

While all of the US states have Safe Haven laws, most of them apply only to children under the age of one year. This is an improvement on Nebraska’s situation, but I don’t know that it goes far enough. I think that people wanting to leave their children should undergo some kind of screening process. If the issue is something that could be helped by counselling or community support, this should be provided. I don’t believe that people should just be allowed to abandon their children - legally or otherwise - as a first resort.

Like parents everywhere, I have days when dealing with my kids really does my head in. But not for a second could I ever imagine being without them.

Kaleidoscopically yours,
Kirsten


Tim's Tales

I worked hard on Friday. There were two major problems with our new computer system, and I fixed them both.

First, some idiot was working on my web server. He was trying to get a default index.html page set up. That’s the page your browser gets when you type http://www.yahoo.com. Unfortunately, this idiot isn’t very familiar with Apache Tomcat, which is the software that publishes my web page. It doesn’t use normal HTML to render the web page, you have to compact the web page into a .war file (kinda like a zip file), and it publishes that. This moron, after firing up both the brain cells in his head, decided to publish a plain HTML file.

That was a real success story. The web pages that were already running were fine, but I couldn’t load any new pages or make changes to the ones already running. That wasn’t good, so this idiot decided to delete all the files he created, but I still couldn’t get it to work. I actually had to shut my web page down in the middle of a Friday because of this twit. Anyone using the web page at the time was cut off and had to log in again. Of course, I forwarded my calls to the fax machine before I shut down the page, so I didn’t get any angry death threats.

Then there was the moron that thought he should work on something else after lunch. I won’t bore you with the details, but I, umm, I mean *he*, managed to lock everyone out of the new system. I know what he did (I was there when I did it), but I couldn’t reverse it. Boss was called in, and he couldn’t reverse it. It was like we bought a new $1.5 million toy and broke it the first day we had it.

But I fixed that too. I’m good at fixing things.

The fact that most of the time I’m at least partially responsible for breaking them is not relevant.

Tim a’Musing
Having a Ball with Yarns

Tip of the Day

Bread will stay fresh longer if a celery rib is stored with it in the package. - Peggy in Tonawanda, New York

Poet-Tree

That was a tough line. It’s not easy coming up with them!

Next opening line…
My aunt died and left me some dough…

Hints: Here’s a great new rhyming/composition tool. http://www.writerhymes.com/
Hints:  There’s a great rhyming dictionary at http://www.rhymezone.com/
Limerick rules.  http://freespace.virgin.net/merrick.sheldon/limerickrules.htm 

Submit Opening Line
Submit Limerick

I haven’t yet learned how to tell
My cat to ring a bell
When he wants in
Or wants out again
I’ll just have to get up, oh Hell. - Bonnie in Louisiana
I haven’t yet learned how to tell…
if a turtle is still in it’s shell.
I rap oh so lightly.
Indeed, quite politely,
but eventually just have to yell. - Lola
I haven’t yet learned how to tell—
if the food in there has a smell—
so I took a whiff
but it wasn’t a gift
because then that was "OH WHAT THE HELL" - Cassandra in New York
My anniversary date I forgot
Lately it seems I do that a lot
It seems my mind does go
And that can really blow
So … ah, er, hmm, I just lost my thought. - E. Cole Aye
My anniversary date I forgot
So that she won´t fill me with buckshot
I´ll tell you what I´ll do
And she´ll love me anew
I go out and buy her a yacht. - E. Cole Aye
My anniversary date I forgot
Because I came home rather besot
The wife is now mad
She´s called me a cad
And wants to untie the wedding knot. - E. Cole Aye
My anniversary date I forgot
The romantic cold shoulder I got
She just cut me off
Might say I got laid-off
So now I get to see a harlot. - E. Cole Aye
My anniversary date I forgot
My solution may be a long shot
I´ll send her a flower
Something that´ll wow her
I´ll buy her a forget-me-not. - E. Cole Aye

Reader Comments
Re: Economic Bail Outs

I work for a securities regulatory agency on the state level. At least 5 years ago I witnessed my FIRST meeting where the highest ranking staff accountant in that agency (who is just about the most sedate and level headed person you can imagine) literally sprayed spittle in an impassioned attempt to get across just how bizarre and unsound the accounting methods being used by these companies were and just how certain the end result of these ever growing investments in bundled subprime mortgages would be. Just about the only people who listened were the people who were doing the audits but ultimately they had no power to make or change policy. Those that could have done so pooh-poohed the risk, even accusing the accountant and others of being "a bunch of Chicken Littles."


This scenario was repeated at least a dozen times in my presence. There were many more when I wasn’t there. It is no exaggeration when I say that I know of at least a hundred letters/reports/analyses of warning that were sent to other state and federal agencies. All of it ultimately to no avail. Not only that, but there were already subprime mortgage companies filing for bankruptcy over two years ago, so there is no excuse for anybody in a position to know to claim that they had no idea that this was coming. - Sign me disgusted.
[Thanks. If you have some of that documentation that you want to share anonymously, I’ll run it.


This is the kind of thing that I keep hearing from many sources. Well-placed (and not so well placed) people knew this was coming for years, but they were making too much money to even consider sounder measures.

Am I wrong when I say that this whole system seems to be about privatizing profit and socializing loss?]
Here’s some back up that’s publicly available. Link 1 and Link 2 - disgusted still



Hi Bruce,
This was sent to me by BrasscheckTV and I think it’s a pretty good explanation of how we got into this mess! - Joe in California




Why have this discussion? None of us have a hotline to the White House. Or, even our Congress people or Senators. They aren’t listening to us, and this isn’t fantasy football. The truth is; we’re in deep doo doo, and there isn’t any realistic way out. Even if one of us had a miracle solution, there isn’t any possibility that we would be taken seriously. L&K - herm



Well, this all just backs up a point I’ve been making for a number of years - if you’ve got next-to-nothing to begin with, no one can really hurt you more. We don’t have stocks, or savings in a bank (our combined bank accounts maybe have a grand in them), or company-provided health insurance (or any health insurance, for that matter - can’t afford it) . I barely have anything in my 401(k) at work, since I was just able to start buying into it about a year ago. Our savings is in "stuff" - things that go up in value, or did, before all this mess hit, and that we can touch, and that we outright own. We paid our house off in ‘97, but with property taxes continually going up around here (Ohio has GOT to do something about school funding!!!!), it’s almost like paying a mortgage, since we have to set aside a certain amount every month to make sure we have enough when tax time comes around. I feel for everyone who has put their trust in the market, or banks, because y’all are getting royally screwed, and it doesn’t look like it’s going to get better anytime soon.

We garden, and heat with wood, and drive used cars - we may not make much money, but we actually are doing better than many of our friends who have steady, fairly-well-paying jobs, because they are all in debt up to their eyeballs. I have credit card debt, but that’s it. And in the general scheme of things, while it’s a tidy sum, it’s really not much, compared to what others have going on.
Hang on, Folks, it’s gonna be a bumpy ride. - OhioKat




This whole mess has been explained to me several times. I still don’t understand all of it. In 1999, a new law was passed and signed by the President. It was sponsored by a few hands-off Republicans and signed into law by a Democrat. It is a bi-party fiasco. If everyone were honest, if everyone weren’t so dang greedy, if everyone didn’t need all the limits to keep them within the bounds of decency, the law would have been great.

The government is made of us. WE are the government. WE are the people clamoring for more and more from the nanny state. WE are the same in personal lives as in our government incarnation. I am one of the lucky few. I have no mortgage. I have no credit card debt. I now have a car loan, but last year I didn’t even have that. I have more money in the bank than the face value of my loans.


I do not live in a fancy house. I do not have a large screen TV. I do not take extravagant vacations on a yearly basis. In fact, I’ve taken two extravagant vacations in my whole life. I don’t wear designer clothes. I cook my own meals. I packed my lunch when I worked. I did not live beyond my means.

All the people going into foreclosure are not paying the money back to the banks and causing the banks to have financial issues. They should never have been given the loans in the first place. But that 1999 law loosened credit. And instead of behaving in a reasonable manner, people not only began living beyond their means, they lived WAY beyond their means. Now they can’t afford to pay off their double or triple mortgaged house and no one else can buy it even at a reduced rate because no one is lending money right now. The 15-20 credit cards are maxed out. The new furniture is being repossessed because the time payments aren’t being met.

People, I don’t care what the Joneses have. I don’t care what you think you deserve. I don’t care how much you think you should have. If you can’t afford to pay for it in cash (reasonable house and perhaps 1 car on credit) you can’t have it. I know that someone else has jewelry, fancy cars, big houses, nice clothes, and luxurious vacations. And everyone over-spending, taking more than their earned share, are going to make my retirement a living hell. I’ve always lived within my means. Now I have to bail out the banks that can’t tolerate you not paying your bills.

WE are the government. What have YOU done to help this economic crisis evolve? - Patti



The basis of the financial crisis is that ancient sin, Usury. Compound interest, by definition, must double the money supply every so many years. For money to mean anything, it must represent gold, or land, or, recently, even municipal water systems. Being on a finite planet, we just don’t have anything left to secure another round of money-creation. When the Christians got involved in lending money, the old custom of Jubilee - the forgiving of all loans every fifty years - was abandoned, so wealth could continue to concentrate in a few hands. Technology empowered colonization and then new avenues for profit plus a population explosion, so this money bubble has been growing for generations, appearing normal, but just as limited as any mine in the end. Some people are even trying to move off-planet, following the logic first presented in science fiction.


There are also problems with over-leveraged money, wasteful wars, and the peak oil/climate crisis, but what we really need to do is have a grand Jubilee, and get back to a range of under ten to one, between the very richest and poorest people on earth. We also need to adopt one of the new measures of wealth, not the Gross Domestic Product, which includes war and reconstruction, car accidents, and chemotherapy. We don’t need to work for owners; even they have found that hired managers do a better job.

When people are economically similar, co-ops are the natural business model. In Mondragon, and now in Argentina, they do everything that private businesses do elsewhere, just as well, except that they refuse to profit by spoiling their own neighborhoods, which distant owners often do. Most of what I know about the history of money is from a film I saw about five years ago, so I don’t have a tidy set of references handy.

Sorry, but I’ll just have let folks look it up themselves if they want to disagree with authority. The Mondragon region of Spain was abandoned by the government, and the basques made their own rules. It should be easy to research, even though, most unusually, I got my information on that at the same film festival. - Bob of the North



IMHO = The CEOs and Upper managers, who made millions of Dollars creating the Economic Bubble that has since burst should be the ones bailing us out. Seven years ago, when I went house hunting, my mortgage company tried to talk me into taking a loan of 250K, I said, no more than 100K. They tried to talk me into a varying rate, by offering No closing costs etc, I said No, 30 yr fixed. Obviously they talked a lot of others into it, and now *I* will have to pay for them even though I was more careful. It just burns My Ass to pay for the errors and arogance of others, while those who made the suggestions and pushed the poor decisions got filthy rich on it. - Faithy (a fiscally conservative - socially liberal - Independant Voter)



Here’s the answer, with documentation and actual news articles:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5tZc8oH–o
and
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=307149667289804&kw=cra - Allen in Grand Rapids, Michigan




Re: Patty on Blindness

Hi Patty,
Robin Williams notes that G.W. Bush waved to Stevie Wonder, but sighted people get some unthinking remarks, too. A friend of mine rode a recumbent (sitting down, feet out front) bicycle on a long tour. Once, two nice ladies saw him at a stop light, and asked if he was handicapped. Straight-faced, he replied " Yes, I’m a paraplegic." As he pedaled away, they were remarking on his bravery for travelling, not his wit.

The best of all might have been when he showed another woman a map of the U.S., with a big red line showing his progress. "Oh, that’s wonderful!" she enthused "And where are you now? "It takes considerable mental effort, plus some talent to imagine oneself in another’s situation, and a half-hearted effort yields some strange remarks.

My blind friend Mike was out walking one night when he came to a sidewalk excavation. As luck would have it, there was a gap in the flashing barricades, and he walked straight through. After climbing out of a ten-foot hole, he went home and got cleaned up. At 8:00 the next morning, he called the City Works Department to complain. Perhaps the fellow there hadn’t had his morning coffee, because when Mike was about half through his story, he interrupted with "Well, if you’re blind, you shouldn’t be out walking at night!" - Bob of the North



Re: Transgender Rights

Bruce in Colorado wrote: “If you were going to be president, how secure would you be when you found out that your primary security person butt-f*cks chickens and enjoys the anal probes the aliens give him?”


I don’t think the question should be “…how secure would you be …”, but rather “…how secure would you feel… “. Being a Bantam Bum Bumper shouldn’t make the person less capable. As long as it was common knowledge that the person had a predilection for backing into thermometers and broom handles in addition to their foul attraction to fowl fornication, they couldn’t be extorted or blackmailed into compromising security under fear of being outed.

Unfortunately, public perception of the “bosses” capability, sanity, or suitability to hold their position would be questioned should such a hiring or job assignment be made. What goes on behind closed barn doors or in orbiting craft shouldn’t be a deciding factor in hiring, but it is. “PCness” rules over common sense in many cases; the potential employee suffers but the employer remains squeaky clean. - sied



Okay, now about that guy who is a man and wants to have a sex change because he thinks he’s a lesbian? What kind of doctor would perform such an operation? The doctor has to be nuttier than the patient. I mean this guy doesn’t even think he’s a woman, he thinks he’s a lesbian? What a crock!

Now this he/she goes for a job interview as a man, but tells the prospective employer that when he/she reports to work, he/she will be a woman? I’d throw his/her resume in the trash right then and there and say, "so sue me!" How weird do people have to get before we say "enough is enough!" A few years ago, they’d have sent the white coats after someone like that.

Yes, the Library of Congress was right! Why the blank do they have to hire just any weirdo off the street just because he’s supposedly qualified? I worked for a small printing company for years and they would go through 50-100 applicants just to find a receptionist. I thought they were a bit picky myself, but apparently 49-99 of them could have sued for some reason or other because they were the ones who weren’t hired. But in this guy’s case, he needs to just get over it. If he’s going to act stupid and weird, then what else can he expect?

This world is getting weirder and weirder every day and it seems to be increasing exponentially! This reminds me of when my Mom used to watch KISS on TV late at night. I was totally shocked! Here she was in her 70s watching KISS. She said they were so strange that it fascinated her. The world today is so strange it’s fascinating. Makes one wonder what will happen next! - Noella



Re: Milk

While people are worrying about the use of breast milk in restaurant dishes, I see different concerns mentioned. But my concern hasn’t been raised yet. I assume that human breast milk is going to be much more costly than the type you get by the gallon from cows. I’m sure there are some women valiantly pumping somewhere trying to make ends meet and this further exploitation is a concern to me.


A greater concern is not an ethical question, but a question of greed. I have no idea how much milk it takes to make a large pot of cream soup for a restaurant. But I’m guessing it is more than a cup, which is about how much is expressed by mothers each time (after they get really good at it, less so at the beginning). So this is going to be not only time intensive (there is only so much ?on tap’ and one must wait for the refill to occur and what is happening to the baby in the meantime) but must take milk from several women. I’m not sure of the type of woman who sells breast milk to restaurants, but I’m going to guess that it isn’t your high end society matron. More likely it’s the crack whore who needs a hit and doesn’t care if she starves the baby or not. Or maybe drug addicts who probably hook on the side, further increasing the likelihood of HIV infection.

All this is unsavory, to say the least. But I’m betting that restaurants may not be completely honest in their advertising. Maybe they are mixing human milk with cow’s milk at a specific rate. Maybe they are just using cow’s milk. Or maybe the price of their food is so high in order to pay for the ingredients (which will have to be higher than $4 per gallon) that no one can afford the ?delicacies’ they provide. If the price isn’t through the roof high, I’m guessing the quantity of human milk is very low. - Patti
[Thanks for answering my question about how much milk a woman produces Patti.  I assume that if this catches on the women would be treated like dairy cows.  After the baby is put on a bottle the mothers keep producing milk as long as they are regularly milked.  I won’t drink the stuff but I might go for owning a dairy!  Milking time would be fun.]



I can’t stand milk either. Mom said that once she took my bottle away, I refused to drink milk. Early on, I could have it with my cereal, but as I got older, I had to use too much sugar to kill the taste of milk. I looked at it one day and it looked like I was eating cereal with Eagles Brand Milk in it. That’s when I switched to OJ in my cereal.

I don’t like shakes or ice milk, though I love malts and ice cream and even milk gravy and puddings. But if I knew that any of that was made with human breast milk, I’d probably upchuck it. And I absolutely could not tell anyone why. It’s just the thought of it.

So I suppose I’m conditioned to eat what I don’t know about. I like balogna and sausage and I try not to think about what goes into it. I like chicken and beef, but I could never kill it myself and I could never work at a processing plant. I like scrambled eggs, but I try to not watch too much when they cook.

I’ve watched movies and TV shows where people ate bugs, roaches, etc. I’ve never been that hungry that I would eat just anything. And even in the shows I have watched, many people had to physically overcome their disgust and distaste at eating such things just so they could stay alive. I think in the movie Grapes of Wrath, the old guy at the end is being nursed by a lady with a baby and he was probably glad for the nutrition. From what I remember, that was a great movie, it was a shame that they stopped half way through the book.

Now even though I don’t like milk does drinking cow’s milk make more sense than drinking human milk? Not really. Cows milk is for baby cows and human milk is for baby humans. - Noella



Lucille said, "I sure wouldn’t order yogurt in a restaurant that used human milk in its preparations."
Since I don’t like milk I certainly don’t go for spoiled milk in any form.  Cheese, yogurt, sour cream, etc. don’t even qualify as food. The only cheese I eat is pizza and cheese cake.  But I don’t even want to look at yogurt. - Mike 



Faithy said, "…believe me, the egg whites comment was tame."
Thanks for putting my mind at ease Faithy! - Mike


Subscribe to RGQ Unsubscribe from RGQ Submit Reader Comment Submit 15 Minutes of Fame Submit Image or Quote Submit to Best of RGQ Submit Tip of the Day Submit Limerick
Submit Photo View Reader Photos

Disclaimer- All quotes printed in this publication are believed to be accurately attributed, but no guarantees are made that some incorrectly attributed, or even outright false quotes won’t get in here from time to time.  I assure readers that I will do my best to weed out incorrect quotes, and will print a retraction as soon as I become aware of any errors.

Click here
to see the archives of past issues, or go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/reallygoodquotes/messages. If you run across something really outstanding when perusing the archives, I’d appreciate it if you’d mail me at TheBestOfRGQ@yahoo.com and point it out to me.  I’m in the process of compiling an e-book called, not surprisingly, The Best of RGQ, and I’d like to hear from you which pieces impacted you the most.

Questions? Comments? Want to contribute a joke or a quote or an image? Feel free to e-mail at reallygoodquotes@yahoo.com. We’d love to hear from you! We’ll even publish your comments, if they make any sense!

If you’d like to receive RGQ by email, please send a blank e-mail to reallygoodquotes-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

We can’t imagine why you’d want to, but if you choose to unsubscribe, please send a blank e-mail to reallygoodquotes-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com. Should you choose to unsubscribe, please e-mail us and tell us why. We listen to what people say, even if they’re leaving us.