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davelj
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Have you been to the Linkery in North Park?
You might like it.
This may sound like blasphemy but I like sausage with kimchi. Now that is a fermented food.
[/quote]I second that recommendation. I loves me some tasty snausages.
davelj
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Have you been to the Linkery in North Park?
You might like it.
This may sound like blasphemy but I like sausage with kimchi. Now that is a fermented food.
[/quote]I second that recommendation. I loves me some tasty snausages.
davelj
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Have you been to the Linkery in North Park?
You might like it.
This may sound like blasphemy but I like sausage with kimchi. Now that is a fermented food.
[/quote]I second that recommendation. I loves me some tasty snausages.
davelj
Participant[quote=sdgrrl]Glad someone posted the article from Vanity Fair- though I find the irony of Vanity Fair publishing it…absolutely ironic! Love many of the articles, but it’s like porn for social climbers ;)[/quote]
I think of Vanity Fair as People Magazine for a different socio-economic set. The issue with the Stiglitz piece also had an article on the internal politics at Goldman during the mid-90s (excerpted from an upcoming book), and a piece from Paul Allen on how he (allegedly) got ripped off by Bill Gates. I generally enjoy it, although the fixation with anything Kennedy- or Old Hollywood-related is a bit much.
Social climbing can be an enjoyable hobby… so long as you’re social and don’t spend all of your money on it.
davelj
Participant[quote=sdgrrl]Glad someone posted the article from Vanity Fair- though I find the irony of Vanity Fair publishing it…absolutely ironic! Love many of the articles, but it’s like porn for social climbers ;)[/quote]
I think of Vanity Fair as People Magazine for a different socio-economic set. The issue with the Stiglitz piece also had an article on the internal politics at Goldman during the mid-90s (excerpted from an upcoming book), and a piece from Paul Allen on how he (allegedly) got ripped off by Bill Gates. I generally enjoy it, although the fixation with anything Kennedy- or Old Hollywood-related is a bit much.
Social climbing can be an enjoyable hobby… so long as you’re social and don’t spend all of your money on it.
davelj
Participant[quote=sdgrrl]Glad someone posted the article from Vanity Fair- though I find the irony of Vanity Fair publishing it…absolutely ironic! Love many of the articles, but it’s like porn for social climbers ;)[/quote]
I think of Vanity Fair as People Magazine for a different socio-economic set. The issue with the Stiglitz piece also had an article on the internal politics at Goldman during the mid-90s (excerpted from an upcoming book), and a piece from Paul Allen on how he (allegedly) got ripped off by Bill Gates. I generally enjoy it, although the fixation with anything Kennedy- or Old Hollywood-related is a bit much.
Social climbing can be an enjoyable hobby… so long as you’re social and don’t spend all of your money on it.
davelj
Participant[quote=sdgrrl]Glad someone posted the article from Vanity Fair- though I find the irony of Vanity Fair publishing it…absolutely ironic! Love many of the articles, but it’s like porn for social climbers ;)[/quote]
I think of Vanity Fair as People Magazine for a different socio-economic set. The issue with the Stiglitz piece also had an article on the internal politics at Goldman during the mid-90s (excerpted from an upcoming book), and a piece from Paul Allen on how he (allegedly) got ripped off by Bill Gates. I generally enjoy it, although the fixation with anything Kennedy- or Old Hollywood-related is a bit much.
Social climbing can be an enjoyable hobby… so long as you’re social and don’t spend all of your money on it.
davelj
Participant[quote=sdgrrl]Glad someone posted the article from Vanity Fair- though I find the irony of Vanity Fair publishing it…absolutely ironic! Love many of the articles, but it’s like porn for social climbers ;)[/quote]
I think of Vanity Fair as People Magazine for a different socio-economic set. The issue with the Stiglitz piece also had an article on the internal politics at Goldman during the mid-90s (excerpted from an upcoming book), and a piece from Paul Allen on how he (allegedly) got ripped off by Bill Gates. I generally enjoy it, although the fixation with anything Kennedy- or Old Hollywood-related is a bit much.
Social climbing can be an enjoyable hobby… so long as you’re social and don’t spend all of your money on it.
davelj
Participant[quote=walterwhite]Waitaminute; what’s this about me dying?[/quote]
With all that meth you’re cooking up, Walter… how can it end any other way?
davelj
Participant[quote=walterwhite]Waitaminute; what’s this about me dying?[/quote]
With all that meth you’re cooking up, Walter… how can it end any other way?
davelj
Participant[quote=walterwhite]Waitaminute; what’s this about me dying?[/quote]
With all that meth you’re cooking up, Walter… how can it end any other way?
davelj
Participant[quote=walterwhite]Waitaminute; what’s this about me dying?[/quote]
With all that meth you’re cooking up, Walter… how can it end any other way?
davelj
Participant[quote=walterwhite]Waitaminute; what’s this about me dying?[/quote]
With all that meth you’re cooking up, Walter… how can it end any other way?
davelj
Participant[quote=UCGal]Brian – I think you’re missing Arraya’s point. Arraya is saying there WILL be a collapse… Just when and the depth are in question.
[/quote]Sure, but… the “when” and the “depth” are the only important considerations.
For example, I know I’m going to die. But the “when” and the “how” are the important issues. Simply noting that I’m going to die doesn’t convey any useful information.
Sure, there will be a collapse… but without any idea of timing (which could be many decades in the future – or longer)… I fall back on Keynes’ quip that, “In the long run we’re all dead.”
[Sorry for butting in.]
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