Most people is pretty quiet right about now. Me, I see a stiff -- one I didn't have to kill myself -- I just get, the urge to, you know, do stuff. Like work out, run around, maybe get some trim if there's a willin' woman about... not that I get flush from corpses or anything. I ain't crazy.

Jayne ,'The Message'


Natter 58: Let's call Venezuela!  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


shrift - Apr 17, 2008 7:58:13 am PDT #2394 of 10001
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

I didn't grow up on a farm, but I did grow up in a farming town. This meant cornfields in the backyard, almost everyone owning a John Deere tractor, and occasionally having to help round up the neighbor's cows when they broke through the fence.

I never took a detassling job, thank god.


Jesse - Apr 17, 2008 7:59:14 am PDT #2395 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Since I grew up with a four-digit house number, I always thought of those who had a FIVE digit house number as rich. Kinda funny how childhood perceptions operate.

That's hilarious.


P.M. Marc - Apr 17, 2008 8:02:10 am PDT #2396 of 10001
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I kinda feel like a freak. I grew up in Kansas and have always been a city boy. My parents were city folk. My grandparents were city folk. Pretty much no farm heritage at all.

I grew up in the suburbs of Seattle, but my mother started her life on a homestead, didn't have electricity or indoor plumbing until she moved out at 18, and worked either cutting Christmas trees or herding cattle depending on the season growing up.

My dad had indoor plumbing sometimes, depending on if they were living in Vancouver or Vancouver Island at the time. Not sure about the farm heritage there. Think it's mostly logging.


Consuela - Apr 17, 2008 8:02:53 am PDT #2397 of 10001
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I remember when a girl in junior high, on learning the neighborhood I lived in, announced that I must be rich. Whereas in a family with five kids, every penny accounted for, I never had that feeling. We were middle-class, but even after we bought a cottage in New Hampshire, I never felt rich: my parents always managed their money as if next week there wouldn't be any.

They've changed, since they retired, and now we the kids are all wondering about their finances, because they're prone to extravagances they never would undertake when we were young.


juliana - Apr 17, 2008 8:04:23 am PDT #2398 of 10001
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

Did your mom go to Lockport High School? My dad graduated from there in 1958.

Might have, but she's younger than your dad. Still - small world.


Kat - Apr 17, 2008 8:06:49 am PDT #2399 of 10001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

We have no farm heritage, but my parents are farm-heritage adjacent, both geographically (right down the road from the amish village!) and historical/social (my dad worked in coal mines as a kid and my mom's father was a fisherman. and mom packed pineapple at the Dole factory as a summer job).


tommyrot - Apr 17, 2008 8:06:50 am PDT #2400 of 10001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Oh, and did you know that a $249,999 a year income is middle class?

There were a small number of interesting points which I suspect will go unnoted in the din. First, Sens. Clinton and Obama used different definitions of “the middle class” in answer to Charlie Gibson’s attempt to extract from them a “no new taxes” on the middle class from them. Hillary Clinton defined the middle class as families earning an income lower than $250,000, a definition with which I’d agree. Basically, that’s all but the top 1% of income earners. Sen. Obama’s definition was families earning an income below $75,000. I think that’s an extremely narrow definition. It doesn’t even include all of the fourth quintile who to me are obviously middle class.

[link]


Gudanov - Apr 17, 2008 8:07:54 am PDT #2401 of 10001
Coding and Sleeping

Debate talk reminds me that Emaryn has shown some actual interest in who wins the presidential election. She's for Hillary since all the presidents have been men.


Hayden - Apr 17, 2008 8:09:17 am PDT #2402 of 10001
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

For Victor: Pinsky does a Q&A on modern poetry in Slate: [link]


Kathy A - Apr 17, 2008 8:09:32 am PDT #2403 of 10001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I'd probably rank "middle class" as going upwards to $150,000 in urban areas with higher cost of living, but once you get above that point, we're talking "upper middle class," IMO.