Nilly, I really liked your Yom Kippur post. I can't ever imagine you offending anyone, ever.
It's nice to get such perspective on the Jewish holidays from someone with such devotion. It makes me appreciate it much more. Prior to this, everything I've learned about Judaism came from epsiodes of Northern Exposure.
I'm a bad, bad Jew.
Jon Stewart said the same thing about his working on Rosh Hashana.
Doesn't everyone have HPV already?
The article did say that it would take 20 or so years until the vaccinated group of women became fully sexually active to show the full benefit.
Also, that article notwithstanding, the 1918 outbreak is like the quiet plague -- I've read so little about it, compared to other plagues in history. It's like it was so scary to people of modern times, few people like to talk or write about it.
There's some general amnesia about American history between 1900-1925, esp. the years right around the end of WWI (1918-1922). The US had several major race riots during this period, as well as a pandemic, a president nearly die in office, and the xenophobia surrounding the League of Nations.
And all anyone can remember is "the eleventh day of the eleventh hour of the eleventh month" and the Black Sox.
I also appreciate the perspective on Jewish holidays, and Judaism itself. I knew nothing about it until I started hanging out here.
Of course, now the former sentence makes you a liar, so it's not like I helped you with that.
That's hillarious.
I haven't rewritten Random Acts of Paypal yet, but when I do, I'll send it to you for further fact-checking.
I've been making Tim a pop-up book for his bday (i know, i can't stop talking about it) and last night I completed the page where his car zooms down the freeway. I got a pic of it off the mercedes site, and modified it a little so it has a halo effect around it, printed it out in grayscale, and detailed it in a silver pen and spent too much time pasting tiny red sequins on the brakelights.
someone with such devotion
You know, lots of people would say that the very fact I post here, interacting on a daily (oh, how I wish) basis with non-Jewish people, let alone watching shows like "Buffy", means that I'm not that devoted, by far. I wouldn't agree with them (obviously, being here), but still.
Prior to this, everything I've learned about Judaism came from epsiodes of Northern Exposure.
Do you have any idea how much I learned from posting on b.org? About stuff that the only other way for me to be exposed to was tv?
when I do, I'll send it to you for further fact-checking.
That will be my pleasure.
I've been making Tim a pop-up book for his bday (i know, i can't stop talking about it)
See, I'm such a skipppppppppppppmpppppper, that it's the first time I've read about it, so it's for the best. It sounds like such a fun project, too! Now I wish I could see how it ends up looking like.
There's some general amnesia about American history between 1900-1925, esp. the years right around the end of WWI (1918-1922).
Which tells you a little something about just how bad those years were, since American history of the 20th century seems to start with the Great Depression and Prohibition, with occasional noises about there having been flappers in the '20's. Like that's the least scary part of 20th century history we can think to start with.
There's some general amnesia about American history between 1900-1925, esp. the years right around the end of WWI (1918-1922). The US had several major race riots during this period, as well as a pandemic, a president nearly die in office, and the xenophobia surrounding the League of Nations.
You're probably referring to Wilson, but Warren Harding did die.
Nilly, Sheryl, Allyson, none of you have done anything to offend me this year.
And on the same note, if I have done anything to offend or wrong anyone here, please let me know. (Nilly said all of this so much better than I can.)
Huh. I feel like I know at least as much about the 1918 Flu than any other plague. But then, I don't know much that's not modern American history, and mostly urban at that.