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Thread: Panic, Purge or Patience?

  1. #211
    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    No. I'm more of an arse man.
    You don't get turned on at the idea of cooking someone's liver and eating it? What about drying it out, crushing it up, and snorting it to get high?
    The Rules
    Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
    Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
    Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)

  2. #212
    Quote Originally Posted by EyeKhan View Post
    You don't get turned on at the idea of cooking someone's liver and eating it?
    Strangely, no.

    What about drying it out, crushing it up, and snorting it to get high?
    Strangely, no.

    ~

    I don't like lamb's or calve's liver when it's on the menu. The idea of eating guts does nothing for me.

    Now if you had a nice meaty man-thigh cooking on a spit roast, with a hint of sage and onion, I would quickly find an appetite.
    Quote Originally Posted by Steely Glint View Post
    It's actually the original French billion, which is bi-million, which is a million to the power of 2. We adopted the word, and then they changed it, presumably as revenge for Crecy and Agincourt, and then the treasonous Americans adopted the new French usage and spread it all over the world. And now we have to use it.

    And that's Why I'm Voting Leave.

  3. #213
    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    Strangely, no.


    Strangely, no.

    ~

    I don't like lamb's or calve's liver when it's on the menu. The idea of eating guts does nothing for me.

    Now if you had a nice meaty man-thigh cooking on a spit roast, with a hint of sage and onion, I would quickly find an appetite.
    I imagine you munching an ass cheek off a hairy, unskined leg. Its far less erotic than it is funny.
    The Rules
    Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
    Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
    Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)

  4. #214
    The hairs woulda burned off, silly.

    And there's a lotta meat to be had on an arse cheek.
    Quote Originally Posted by Steely Glint View Post
    It's actually the original French billion, which is bi-million, which is a million to the power of 2. We adopted the word, and then they changed it, presumably as revenge for Crecy and Agincourt, and then the treasonous Americans adopted the new French usage and spread it all over the world. And now we have to use it.

    And that's Why I'm Voting Leave.

  5. #215
    Quote Originally Posted by Timbuk2 View Post
    The hairs woulda burned off, silly.

    And there's a lotta meat to be had on an arse cheek.
    But its not as funny without the hair.
    The Rules
    Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
    Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
    Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)

  6. #216
    Erotic arse eating? You guys crack me up.

    ********


    Schwab worries about the little guy

    ‘This is the most violent period I've ever seen’

    .....The May 6 crash may have been a freak occurrence, but it felt like one more sign that the deck was stacked against the little guy. "They got burned very badly before," Pennock says, "and they don't ever want to be in that situation again."

    Many small investors had only begun to tiptoe back into equities when the May 6 crash and the European credit crisis rocked the markets, completing a particularly cruel cycle. In the year prior — while the S&P 500 was rebounding 69 percent from its Mar. 9, 2009, bottom — individual investors withdrew a total of $11.5 billion from U.S. equity mutual funds and poured $506 billion into lower-yielding bond funds, according to TrimTabs Investment Research. By late spring, they had just begun to reverse course, venturing back into equities by channeling $13.9 billion into domestic mutual and ETF funds in March and $6.9 billion in April. By the third week of May, they'd withdrawn $29.3 million from U.S. equity mutual funds and poured an additional $8.2 billion into bonds. An American Association of Individual Investors survey taken the week of the May crash showed investor sentiment jumped to 36 percent "bearish," from 28 percent the week before. As of May 10, according to the Federal Reserve, money on the sidelines in bank and money market accounts had reached $9.36 trillion, compared to $7.44 trillion in May 2007.

    The period since early 2008 "is the worst time since I began the company," says Charles Schwab, the father of the modern American individual investor. "These are the most violent markets. Most people are still in a state of fear. I'd say 98 percent are still very concerned. And for a lot of good reasons. Look at the headlines. You've got these scoundrels doing all this stuff. People wonder, 'Who can I trust?' "
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37389008..._businessweek/

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