Lets make Friday 'Joke Day'!

Stimulus payment information:



This year taxpayers will receive an Economic Stimulus Payment. This is a very exciting new program which I will explain using the Q and A format:



Q. What is an Economic Stimulus Payment?

A. It is money the federal government will send to taxpayers.



Q. Where will the government get this money?

A. From taxpayers.



Q. So the government is giving me back my own money?

A. Only a smidgen.



Q. What is the purpose of this payment?

A. The plan is you will use the money to purchase a high-definition TV set, thus stimulating the economy.



Q/ But isn't that stimulating the economy of China?

A. Shut up!





Below is some helpful advice on how to best help the US economy by spending your stimulus check wisely:



If you spend that money at Wal-Mart, all the money will go to China.

If you spend it on gasoline it all go to the Arabs.

If you purchase a computer it will go to India.

If you purchase fruit and vegetables it will go to Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala (unless you buy organic).

If you buy a car it will go to Japan.

If you purchase useless crap it will go to Taiwan.

If you pay your credit cards off, it will go to bank management bonuses and they will hide it offshore.

Same with stock investments.



Instead, you can keep the money in America by spending it at yard sales, going to a baseball game or spending it on prostitutes, beer and wine (domestic ONLY), or tattoos, since those are the only American businesses still operating in the US.
 
Guam is cooler than Maryland, and everything stinks if you're a turtle.

Proof That The World Is Nuts

In Lebanon , men are legally allowed to have sex with animals, but the animals must be female. Having sexual relations with a male animal is punishable by death.
(Like THAT makes sense.)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

In
Bahrain , a male doctor may legally examine a woman's genitals, but is prohibited from looking directly at them during the examination. He may only see their reflection in a mirror.

(Do they look different reversed?)

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*


Muslims are banned from looking at the genitals of a corpse. This also applies to undertakers. The sex organs of the deceased must be covered with a brick or piece of wood at all times.

(A brick?)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

The penalty for masturbation in
Indonesia is decapitation..

(Much worse than 'going blind!')
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

There are men in
Guam whose full-time job is to travel the countryside and deflower young virgins, who pay them for the privilege of having sex for the first time
Reason: under
Guam law, it is expressly forbidden for virgins to marry.

(Let's just think for a minute; is there
any job anywhere else in the world that even comes close to this?)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

In
Hong Kong , a betrayed wife is legally allowed to kill her adulterous husband, but may only do so with her bare hands.
The husband's illicit lover, on the other hand, may be killed in any manner desired.

(Ah! Justice!)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Topless saleswomen are legal in
Liverpool , England - but only in tropical fish stores.

(But of course!)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

In
Cali , Colombia , a woman may only have sex with her husband, and the first time this happens, her mother must be in the room to witness the act..
(Makes one shudder at the thought..)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

In
Santa Cruz , Bolivia , it is illegal for a man to have sex with a woman and her daughter at the same time.

(I presume this was a big enough problem that they had to pass this law?)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

In
Maryland , it is illegal to sell condoms from vending machines with one exception: Prophylactics may be dispensed from a vending machine only 'in places where alcoholic beverages are sold for consumption on the premises.'

(Is this a great country or what?
Well, not as great as Guam !)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*


Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories an hour.

(Who volunteers for these tests?)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

The ant can lift 50 times its own weight, can pull 30 times its own weight and always falls over on its right side when intoxicated.
(From drinking little bottles of???)

(Did our government pay for this research??)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Butterflies taste with their feet.

(Ah, geez.)

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*


An ostrich's eye is bigger than its brain.

(I know some people like that.)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Starfish don't have brains.

(I know some people like that, too.)
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

And, the best for last?

Turtles can breathe through their butts.


(Proof that god has a sense of humor!)
 
At the risk of offending the women around here, here are a few jokes I came across which I thought were kind of funny!



Why is a Laundromat a really bad place to pick up a woman?
Because a woman who can't even afford a washing machine will never be able to support you.

Why do men pass gas more than women?
Because women won't shut up long enough to build up pressure.

One golfer tells another: "Hey, guess what? I got a set of golf clubs for my wife!"
The other replies: "GREAT trade!"

How many men does it take to open a beer?
None. It should be opened by the time she brings it in.

What do you call a woman with two brain cells?
Pregnant.

I married Miss Right.
I just didn't know her first name was Always.

Losing a wife can be hard.
In my case, it was almost impossible.

I haven't spoken to my wife for 18 months-
I don't like to interrupt her.

Women are so unreasonable!
My wife gets mad because every Saturday night I take a bath with bubbles in it. I mean, if Bubbles doesn't mind, why should she?

Most accidents happen at home.
And the men have to eat them!

Some mornings I wake up grouchy...
and some mornings I just let her sleep!

Bigamy is having one wife too many. Some say monogamy is the same.

Scientists have discovered a food that diminishes a woman's sex drive by 90 percent....
Wedding cake!

Marriage is a 3-ring circus:
engagement ring, wedding ring and suffering.


Ba-Da-Boom! He'll be here all week, folks!
 
Ric, you don't need to apologize for that last post. If the truth hurts maybe it was mean to hurt.

/s/ married man
 
Heard this on NPR (paraphrased):

"You know, my brother's a lawyer."
"Oh."
"No no, he's a good lawyer!"
"Oh? When did he pass?"
 
Heard this on NPR (paraphrased):

"You know, my brother's a lawyer."
"Oh."
"No no, he's a good lawyer!"
"Oh? When did he pass?"
I'm gonna send that to one of my lawyer students. He'll love it. Thanks William! :D
 
THE GEOGRAPHY OF A WOMAN

Between 18 and 22, a woman is like Africa , half discovered, half wild, fertile and naturally beautiful! Between 23 and 30, a woman is like Europe , well developed and ready for travel. Between 31 and 35, a woman is like Spain , very hot, relaxed and convinced of her own beauty.

Between 36 and 40, a woman is like Greece , gently aging but still a warm and desirable place to visit.

Between 41 and 50, a woman is like Great Britain , with a glorious and all conquering past.

Between 51 and 60, a woman is like Israel , has been through war and doesn't make the same mistakes twice, takes care of business.

Between 61 and 70, a woman is like Canada , self-preserving, but open to meeting new people.

After 70, she becomes Tibet , wildly beautiful, with a mysterious past and the wisdom of the ages...only those with an adventurous spirit and a thirst for spiritual knowledge visit there.




THE GEOGRAPHY OF A MAN

Between 1 and 70, a man is like Iran , Ruled by Nuts.
 
stripperfireman.png


I am still laughing over this one!!
 
Sven and Olle die and go to hell...

Ole and Sven die in a snowmobiling accident, drunker than skunks, and go to
Hell. The Devil observes that they are really enjoying themselves.

He says to them 'Doesn't the heat and smoke bother you?" Ole replies,
'Vell, ya know, ve're from nordern Michigan, da land of snow an ice, an
ve're yust happy fer a chance ta varm up a little bit, don't ya know.'

The devil decides that these two aren't miserable enough and turns up the
heat even more. When he returns to the room of the two guys from Michigan's
Upper Peninsula, the devil finds them in light jackets and hats, grilling
Walleye and drinking beer.

The devil is astonished and exclaims, 'Everyone down here is in abject
misery, and you two seem to be enjoying yourselves?' Sven replies, 'Vell,
ya know, ve don't git too much varm veather up dere at da Soo, so ve've
yust got ta haff a fish fry vhen da veather's dis nice.'

The devil is absolutely furious. He can hardly see straight. Finally he
comes up with the answer. The two guys love the heat because they have been
cold all their lives.

The devil decides to turn all the heat off in Hell. The next morning, the
temperature is 60 below zero, icicles are hanging everywhere, and people
are shivering so bad that they are unable to wail, moan or gnash their
teeth. The devil smiles and heads for the room with Ole and Sven. He gets
there and finds them back in their parkas, bomber hats, and mittens. They
are jumping up and down, cheering, yelling and screaming like mad men. The
devil is dumbfounded, 'I don't understand, when I turn up the heat you're
happy. Now its freezing cold and you're still happy. What is wrong with you
two?'

They both look at the devil in surprise and say, "Vell, don't ya know; if
hell is froze over, dat must mean da Lions von da Super Bowl!
 
Re: Sven and Olle die and go to hell...

Lena told Ole that she had decided to start swimming and pretty soon she was signed up for a little local swim meet, competing in the breast stroke. She came in last.

Later, she told Ole, "You know, I don't want to cause no problems or nothin', but you know, some a dose girls, I think dey was using dere arms!"
 

Perks of reaching 50 or being over 60 and heading towards 70!

01. Kidnappers are not very interested in you.

02.In a hostage situation you are likely to be released first.

03. No one expects you to run--anywhere.

04.People call at 9 pm and ask, did I wake you?

05. People no longer view you as a hypochondriac.

06.There is nothing left to learn the hard way.

07.
Things you buy now won't wear out.

08.You can eat supper at 4 pm.

09.
You can live without sex but not your glasses.

10.You get into heated arguments about pension plans.

11. You no longer think of speed limits as a challenge.

12.You quit trying to hold your stomach in no matter who walks into the room.

13. You sing along with elevator music.

14.Your eyes won't get much worse.

15. Your investment in health insurance is finally beginning to pay off.

16.Your joints are more accurate meteorologists than the national weather service.

17. Your secrets are safe with your friends because they can't remember them either.

18.Your supply of brain cells is finally down to manageable size.

19. You can't remember who sent you this list. And you notice these are all in Big Print for your convenience.


Never, under any circumstances, take a sleeping pill and a laxative on the same night.
 
This morning on Interstate 295 I looked over to my left and there was a -----

Woman in a brand new Cadillac doing 65 mph with her face up next to her

rear view mirror putting on her eyeliner.

I looked away for a couple seconds!

And when I looked back she was halfway over in my lane, still working on that makeup.

As a man, I don't scare easily. But she scared me so much---

I dropped My electric shaver , which knocked the donut out of my other hand. In all the confusion of trying to straighten out the car, using my knees against the steering wheel, it knocked my cell phone away from my ear, which fell into the coffee between my legs, splashed and burned
Big Jim and the Twins, ruined the damn phone, soaked my trousers, and disconnected an important call.

Damn women drivers!!
 
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This is another one from my sister:

He said to me . . . I don't know why you wear a bra; you've got nothing to put in it.
I said to him . . . You wear pants don't you?

He said to me . . ..... Shall we try swapping positions tonight?
She said . That's a good idea - you stand by the ironing board while I sit on the sofa and fart!

He said to me. ... What have you been doing with all the grocery money I gave you?
I said to him . .....Turn sideways and look in the mirror!

He said to me. ..... Why don't women blink during foreplay?
I said to him .. . They don't have time.

He said to me. . How many men does it take to change a roll of toilet paper?
I said to him .. . We don't know; it has never happened.

He said to me. . Why is it difficult to find women who are sensitive, caring and Good-looking?
I said to him . . . They already have boyfriends.

I said...What do you call a woman who knows where her husband is every night?
He said. . . A widow.

He said to me . .. . Why are married women heavier than single women?
I said to him . . Single women come home, see what's in the fridge and go to bed. Married women come home, see what's in bed and go to the fridge.
 
Some of you are old enough to remember this stuff:


Real Programmers write in Fortran.

Maybe they do now,
in this decadent era of
Lite beer, hand calculators and "user-friendly" software
but back in the Good Old Days,
when the term "software" sounded funny
and Real Computers were made out of drums and vacuum tubes,
Real Programmers wrote in machine code.
Not Fortran. Not RATFOR. Not, even, assembly language.
Machine Code.
Raw, unadorned, inscrutable hexadecimal numbers.
Directly.

Lest a whole new generation of programmers
grow up in ignorance of this glorious past,
I feel duty-bound to describe,
as best I can through the generation gap,
how a Real Programmer wrote code.
I'll call him Mel,
because that was his name.

I first met Mel when I went to work for Royal McBee Computer Corp.,
a now-defunct subsidiary of the typewriter company.
The firm manufactured the LGP-30,
a small, cheap (by the standards of the day)
drum-memory computer,
and had just started to manufacture
the RPC-4000, a much-improved,
bigger, better, faster -- drum-memory computer.
Cores cost too much,
and weren't here to stay, anyway.
(That's why you haven't heard of the company, or the computer.)

I had been hired to write a Fortran compiler
for this new marvel and Mel was my guide to its wonders.
Mel didn't approve of compilers.

"If a program can't rewrite its own code,"
he asked, "what good is it?"

Mel had written,
in hexadecimal,
the most popular computer program the company owned.
It ran on the LGP-30
and played blackjack with potential customers
at computer shows.
Its effect was always dramatic.
The LGP-30 booth was packed at every show,
and the IBM salesmen stood around
talking to each other.
Whether or not this actually sold computers
was a question we never discussed.

Mel's job was to re-write
the blackjack program for the RPC-4000.
(Port? What does that mean?)
The new computer had a one-plus-one
addressing scheme,
in which each machine instruction,
in addition to the operation code
and the address of the needed operand,
had a second address that indicated where, on the revolving drum,
the next instruction was located.
In modern parlance,
efvery single instruction was followed by a GO TO!
Put *that* in Pascal's pipe and smoke it.

Mel loved the RPC-4000
because he could optimize his code:
that is, locate instructions on the drum
so that just as one finished its job,
the next would be just arriving at the "read head"
and available for immediate execution.
There was a program to do that job,
an "optimizing assembler",
but Mel refused to use it.

"You never know where its going to put things",
he explained, "so you'd have to use separate constants".

It was a long time before I understood that remark.
Since Mel knew the numerical value
of every operation code,
and assigned his own drum addresses,
every instruction he wrote could also be considered
a numerical constant.
He could pick up an earlier "add" instruction, say,
and multiply by it,
if it had the right numeric value.
His code was not easy for someone else to modify.

I compared Mel's hand-optimized programs
with the same code massaged by the optimizing assembler program,
and Mel's always ran faster.
That was because the "top-down" method of program design
hadn't been invented yet,
and Mel wouldn't have used it anyway.
He wrote the innermost parts of his program loops first,
so they would get first choice
of the optimum address locations on the drum.
The optimizing assembler wasn't smart enough to do it that way.

Mel never wrote time-delay loops, either,
even when the balky Flexowriter
required a delay between output characters to work right.
He just located instructions on the drum
so each successive one was just *past* the read head
when it was needed;
the drum had to execute another complete revolution
to find the next instruction.
He coined an unforgettable term for this procedure.
Although "optimum" is an absolute term,
like "unique", it became common verbal practice
to make it relative:
"not quite optimum" or "less optimum"
or "not very optimum".
Mel called the maximum time-delay locations
the "most pessimum".

After he finished the blackjack program
and got it to run,
("Even the initializer is optimized",
he said proudly)
he got a Change Request from the sales department.
The program used an elegant (optimized)
random number generator
to shuffle the "cards" and deal from the "deck",
and some of the salesmen felt it was too fair,
since sometimes the customers lost.
They wanted Mel to modify the program
so, at the setting of a sense switch on the console,
they could change the odds and let the customer win.

Mel balked.
He felt this was patently dishonest,
which it was,
and that it impinged on his personal integrity as a programmer,
which it did,
so he refused to do it.
The Head Salesman talked to Mel,
as did the Big Boss and, at the boss's urging,
a few Fellow Programmers.
Mel finally gave in and wrote the code,
but he got the test backwards,
and, when the sense switch was turned on,
the program would cheat, winning every time.
Mel was delighted with this,
claiming his subconscious was uncontrollably ethical,
and adamantly refused to fix it.

After Mel had left the company for greener pa$ture$,
the Big Boss asked me to look at the code
and see if I could find the test and reverse it.
Somewhat reluctantly, I agreed to look.
Tracking Mel's code was a real adventure.

I have often felt that programming is an art form,
whose real value can only be appreciated
by another versed in the same arcane art;
there are lovely gems and brilliant coups
hidden from human view and admiration, sometimes forever,
by the very nature of the process.
You can learn a lot about an individual
just by reading through his code,
even in hexadecimal.
Mel was, I think, an unsung genius.

Perhaps my greatest shock came
when I found an innocent loop that had no test in it.
No test. *None*.
Common sense said it had to be a closed loop,
where the program would circle, forever, endlessly.
Program control passed right through it, however,
and safely out the other side.
It took me two weeks to figure it out.

The RPC-4000 computer had a really modern facility
called an index register.
It allowed the programmer to write a program loop
that used an indexed instruction inside;
each time through,
the number in the index register
was added to the address of that instruction,
so it would refer
to the next datum in a series.
He had only to increment the index register
each time through.
Mel never used it.

Instead, he would pull the instruction into a machine register,
add one to its address,
and store it back.
He would then execute the modified instruction
right from the register.
The loop was written so this additional execution time
was taken into account --
just as this instruction finished,
the next one was right under the drum's read head,
ready to go.
But the loop had no test in it.

The vital clue came when I noticed
the index register bit,
the bit that lay between the address
and the operation code in the instruction word,
was turned on--
yet Mel never used the index register,
leaving it zero all the time.
When the light went on it nearly blinded me.

He had located the data he was working on
near the top of memory --
the largest locations the instructions could address --
so, after the last datum was handled,
incrementing the instruction address
would make it overflow.
The carry would add one to the
operation code, changing it to the next one in the instruction set:
a jump instruction.
Sure enough, the next program instruction was
in address location zero,
and the program went happily on its way.

I haven't kept in touch with Mel,
so I don't know if he ever gave in to the flood of
change that has washed over programming techniques
since those long-gone days.
I like to think he didn't.
In any event,
I was impressed enough that I quit looking for the
offending test,
telling the Big Boss I couldn't find it.
He didn't seem surprised.
When I left the company,
the blackjack program would still cheat
if you turned on the right sense switch,
and I think that's how it should be.
I didn't feel comfortable
hacking up the code of a Real Programmer.
-- Source: usenet: utastro!nather, May 21, 1983.
 
I worked with a "Mel" early on in my career. He used to give brown bag talks on occasion, and also talked about timing the drum and placing instructions at the right places. ... what a guy!
 
Some of you are old enough to remember this stuff:

Brings back memories of programming a Univac SS90. None of that fancy hex stuff though -- this was before IBM blessed the world with hex and the 360 family.

The SS90 had a 5000 word drum and the top 1000 words were "fast access" meaning that you could access one every 1/4 revolution of the drum. When we finally acquired an assembler it did a fair job of optimizing but not as good as a "real programmer" could do.

Thanks for your post. It brings back memories of a pleasant time in my career.
 
Brings back memories of programming a Univac SS90. None of that fancy hex stuff though -- this was before IBM blessed the world with hex and the 360 family.

The SS90 had a 5000 word drum and the top 1000 words were "fast access" meaning that you could access one every 1/4 revolution of the drum. When we finally acquired an assembler it did a fair job of optimizing but not as good as a "real programmer" could do.

Thanks for your post. It brings back memories of a pleasant time in my career.

At least you had drum memory. I recall a digital/analog hybrid we had in the EE department at Washington State University when I was a student in the early 1970s. I knew of noone who ever used it as a hybrid. I took a 1 semester class on programming the analog half. Patch cords and pots. And I was one of a handful of people who ever touched the digital half. You had to be desperate and the line for the keypunch machines down the hall had to be BAD. Mass storage? Paper tape. At least it had an optical reader. Here's the process for writing and running a FORTRAN job -

1. Load a paper tape that gave you an editor. Loading was accomplished by throwing switches.

2. Write your code and check for errors. Once happy, punch a paper tape with the source code.

3. Load the FORTRAN compiler (paper tape, again). Load the source code tape. Start compiler. If it ran without compiler errors it punched an object code tape.

4. Load a paper tape with runtime modules, followed by your object code tape. Assuming no errors your program will now run. Print out results on teletype terminal.

Are we having fun yet? I don't miss that old box at all.
 
My short experience with writing anything was with punch cards, about a hundred or so. The last thing you wanted to do was drop the stack, unbundled.
 
Are we having fun yet? I don't miss that old box at all.
My first experience with a computer was an IBM 1620, in 1963 or 64. About the size of a large desk. Input was by typewriter (IBM Selectric, woo!) on the console, or by punch cards. Same duo for output. The saving grace for this computer was it had an external hard drive. This was a standalone pedestal looking thing with a plastic top, inside you could view the disk and the read heads. The disk stack had about six platters. The disk had a fortran compiler installed (and beyond that, we students didn't have a need to know.... :frown2:

RAM? How much RAM you ask? 8k. And you could open up the back and pull out a RAM card and see all the little horizontal, vertical, and diagonal wires with the ferrite ring at each intersection.

I understand they just found one of these rigs in the La Brea Tar Pits. Clearly it is the same vintage as the other stuff they found there.... :D

-Skip
 
I started with a Burroughs B5500 in 64 learning ALGOL. It filled a room just a bit smaller than our hangar (or so it seemed to a kid).

I remember the 1620. Wasn't that the variable length integer machine where you could use all the memory as a single number (minus a little for some code)?

Joe
 
I remember the 1620. Wasn't that the variable length integer machine where you could use all the memory as a single number (minus a little for some code)? Joe
Sorry, it is too far back in time for me to remember that detail. We also had access to an analog computer back then, but I don't remember what it was.

-Skip
 
RAM? How much RAM you ask? 8k. And you could open up the back and pull out a RAM card and see all the little horizontal, vertical, and diagonal wires with the ferrite ring at each intersection.
-Skip
And all wired by hand, one bit at a time.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_memory
Forrester's coincident-current system required one of the wires to be run at 45 degrees to the cores, which proved impossible to wire by machine, so that core arrays had to be assembled by workers with fine motor control under microscopes. Initially, garment workers were used.
...
By the late 1950s industrial plants had been set up in the Far East to build core. Inside, hundreds of workers strung cores for low pay. This lowered the cost of core to the point where it became largely universal as main memory by the early 1960s, replacing both the low-cost and low-performance drum memory as well as the high-cost and high-performance systems using vacuum tubes, later transistors, as memory. Certain manufacturers also employed Scandinavian seamstresses who had been laid off due to mechanization of the textile industry.
The cost of core memory declined sharply over the lifetime of the technology: costs began at roughly US$1.00 per bit and eventually approached roughly US$0.01 per bit. Core was in turn replaced by integrated silicon RAM chips in the 1970s.
 
How do things look to you after a few drinks?

The enlarged photo spread the sheet too much... so, I'll leave it for you to access.
 

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I don't know what show this is from but I have a feeling I might have liked it had I seen this episode. :D

Awesome song! :rofl:
 

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Hypnotism at the Senior Center

Hypnotism at the Senior Center

It was entertainment night at the Senior Center .

Claude the hypnotist exclaimed: 'I'm here to put you all into a trance - I intend to hypnotize each and every member of the audience.'

The excitement was almost electric as Claude withdrew a beautiful antique pocket watch from his coat. The polished metal gleamed in the light.

Claude the hypnotist said: 'I want you each to keep your eyes on this antique watch.

It's a very special watch. It's been in my family for six generations.'

He began to swing the watch gently back and forth while quietly chanting, 'Watch the watch, watch the watch, watch the watch . .. . '

The crowd became mesmerized as the watch swayed back and forth, light shimmering off its polished surface. Hundreds of pairs of eyes followed the swaying watch, until, suddenly, it slipped from the hypnotist's fingers and fell to the floor, shattering into a hundred pieces.

'CRAP!'
said the Hypnotist.


It took 3 days to clean up the
Senior Center ...
 
True Friendship

None of that Sissy Crap

Are you tired of those sissy 'friendship' poems that always sound good,but never actually come close to reality?Well, here is a series of promises that actually speak of true friendship.You will see no cutesy little smiley faces or angels on this card-Just the stone cold truth of our great friendship.

1. When you are sad --I will help you get drunk and plot revenge againstthe sorry bastard who made you sad.

2. When you are blue -- I will try to dislodge whatever is choking you.

3. When you smile -- I will know you are plotting something that I want to be involved in.

4.When you are scared -- I will rag on you about it every chance I get.

5.When you are worried -- I will tell you horrible stories about how much Worse it could be until you quit whining.

6.When you are confused -- I will use little, tiny words.

7. When you are sick --Stay the hell away from me until you are wellagain. I don't want whatever you have.

8.When you fall -- I will probably point and laugh at your clumsy ass.

9. This is my oath.... I pledge it to the end 'Why?' you may ask;'because you are my friend'.


Friendship is like peeing your pants,everyone can see it,but only you can feel it's true warmth.

Remember: A friend will help you move. A really good friend will help you move a body. Let me know if I ever need to bring a shovel...
 
The weekly cartoons
 

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Hung Chow calls into work and says, "Hey, I no come work today, I really sick . Got headache, stomach ache and legs hurt, I no come work."

The boss says, "You know something, Hung Chow, I really need you today. When I feel sick like you do, I go to my wife and tell her to give me sex. That makes everything better and I go to work. You try that."

Two hours later Hung Chow calls again.

"I do what you say and I feel great. I be at work soon.......... You got nice house."
 
If you have an airport dog, never name him "Clear!". :D
 
One Sunday morning, the pastor noticed little Alex standing in the foyer of the church staring up at a large plaque. It was covered with names and small American flags mounted on either side of it. The six-year old had been staring at the plaque for some time, so the pastor walked up, stood beside the little boy, and said quietly, 'Good morning Alex.'
'Good morning Pastor,' he replied, still focused on the plaque. 'Pastor, what is this? '

The pastor said, 'Well son, it's a memorial to all the young men and women who died in the service.'
Soberly, they just stood together, staring at the large plaque.
Finally, little Alex's voice, barely audible and trembling with fear asked,







'Which service, the 8:30 or the 10:30?'
 
This was not me, but comes very close to describing what I did in my free time at that age. We didn't have TV or electronic games, we spent a lot of time in basements, backyards, abandoned houses, creeks, forests:
DT

Around age 10 my dad got me one of those little badass long bow beginner kits. Of course, the first month I went around our land sticking arrows in anything that could get stuck by an arrow. Did you know that a 1955 40horse Farmall tractor will take 6 rounds before it goes down? Tough SOB.

That got boring, so being the 10 yr. old Dukes of Hazard fan that I was, I quickly advanced to taking strips of cut up T-shirt doused in chainsaw gas tied around the end and was sending flaming arrows all over the place. Keep in mind this was 99.999% humidity swampland so there really wasn't any fire danger. Ill put it this way- a set of post hole diggers and a 3ft. hole and you had yourself a well.

One summer afternoon, I was shooting flaming arrows into a large rotten oak stump in our backyard. I looked over under the carport and see a shiny brand new can of starting fluid (ether). The light bulb went off. I grabbed the can and set it on the stump. I thought that it would probably just spray out in a disappointing manner... let’s face it to a 10 yr. old mouth-breather like myself ether really doesn't "sound" flammab le. So, I went back into the house and got a 1 pound can of dads muzzleloader pyrodex . At this point, I set the can of ether on the stump and opened up the can of black powder. My intentions were to sprinkle a little bit around the ether can but it all sorta dumped out on me. No biggie... 1lb pyrodex and 16oz ether should make a loud pop, kinda like a firecracker you know? You know what? Heck with that. I'm going back in the house for the other can. Yes, I got a second can of pyrodex and dumped it too.


Now we're cookin'. I stepped back about 15ft and lit the 2 stroke arrow. I drew the nock to my cheek and let fly. As I released I heard a swish as the arrow launched from my bow. In a slow motion time frame, I turned to see my dad getting out of the truck... OH CRAP he just got home from work. So help me God it took 10 minutes for that arrow to go from my bow to the can. My dad was walking towards me in slow motion with a WTF look in his eyes. I turned back towards my target just in time to see the arrow pierce the starting fluid can right at the bottom. Right through the main pile of pyrodex and into the can. Oh. Hell. When the shock wave hit it knocked me off my feet. I don't know if it was the actual compression wave that threw me back or just reflex jerk back from 235 MF’n decibels of sound. I caught a half a millisecond glimpse of the violence during the initial explosion and I will tell you there was du st, grass, and bugs all hovering 1ft above the ground as far as I could see.

It was like a little low to the ground layer of dust fog full of grasshoppers, spiders, and a crawfish or two. The daylight turned purple. Let me repeat this... THE DAMN DAYLIGHT TURNED PURPLE. There was a big sweetgum tree out by the gate going into the pasture. Notice I said "was". That mother got up and ran off. So here I am, on the ground blown completely out of my shoes with my thundercats T-shirt shredded, my dad is on the other side of the carport having what I can only assume is a Vietnam flashback ECHO BRAVO CHARLIE YOUR BRINGIN' EM IN TOO CLOSE!! CEASE FIRE GOLL DAMIT CEASE FIRE!!!!!

His hat has blown off and is 30 ft. behind him in the driveway. All windows on the north side of the house are blown out and there is a slow rolling mushroom cloud about 2000ft over our backyard. There is a Honda 185s 3 wheeler parked on the other side of the yard and the fenders are drooped down and are now touching the tires. I wish I knew what I said to my dad at this moment. I don't know- I know I said something. I couldn't hear. I couldn't hear inside my own head. I don't think he heard me either... not that it would really matter. I don't remember much from this point on. I said something, felt a sharp pain, and then woke up later. I felt a sharp pain, blacked out, woke later.... repeat this process for an hour or so and you get the idea. I remember at one point my mom had to give me CPR so dad could beat me some more.

Bring him back to life so dad can kill him again. Thanks mom. One thing is for sure... I never had to mow around that stump again. Mom had been bitching about that thing for years and dad never did anything about it. I stepped up to the plate and handled business. Dad sold his muzzleloaders a week or so later. And I still have some sort of bone growth abnormality either from the blast or the beating. Or both. I guess what I'm trying to say is, get your kids into archery. Its good discipline and will teach them skills they can use later on in life.
(author unknown)
 
M. L. McLemore's Lone Star Baste

Recipe by: M. L. McLemore For those of you who like barbecue, I offer one
of my late father's concoctions for basting, which I learned today is also
called the mop (thanks, Richard Thead).

M. L. McLemore's Lone Star Baste (as remembered by his daughter, Martha)

2 6-packs of Lone Star beer, one on ice, the other one doesn't matter

1 quart of cheap vinegar (better to scrimp on the vinegar than on the beer)

1 small bottle Tabasco, no substitutes

1 large head of garlic, peeled and finely minced

1 4-ounce can black pepper

1 small jar French's yellow mustard (baby crap, he called
it, but he ate it on almost everything - go figure!)

6 dried jalepeno peppers, crushed, seeds and all
(firecrackers, he called them)

1 pound of butter, melted (none of that greasy margarine, for crissake!)

1 more 6-pack of Lone Star, on ice

1 50 pound bag of ice

1 side of beef or one helluva big pig

2 young'uns with fly swatters, on rotating shifts (there were 6 of us at
the time)

1 wheel of cheddar, the kind that smells like work socks at the end of the
day

2 boxes of crackers

1 case of Pik coils

2 lawn chairs, one for his butt, one for his feet

1 Stetson; his cookin' hat, not the one he wore to the rodeo

1 pair of shades, made out of welder's glass

2 cartons Lucky Strikes or Camels (filters?! Real men don't smoke
filtered butts, what's the matter with you, FOOL?!)

1 Zippo lighter, circa 1943, extra flints and fluid

1 more 6-pack of Lone Star, on ice

1 loud, wind-up alarm clock, the one he called "The Voice of God"

2 50-pound bags of mesquite or pecan chips, soaked in water overnight in
the dogs' washtub, which was actually one of those galvanized cattle
troughs - nothing was too good for his 'dawgs'. (Jealous of his
dogs, you say? Damn right, I was! He never hit his dogs and they didn't
have to swat flies for him!)

1 6-pack of Pabst Blue Ribbon, ice optional (Never give the good stuff to
the neighbors who wandered over, but always have something to give them!
(M. L.'s personal Code of the West.)

Empty one 6-pack of Lone Star into a 3 gallon stock pot. Add the vinegar,
mustard, Tabasco, butter, peppers, garlic and a fifth of water. Bring to a
high, rollin' boil to melt the butter; keep hot on the cool end of the
grill.

Fire up the cooker when you get home on Friday night. Burn a couple or
three mesquite logs (his preference) to get a foot-thick bed of cherry-red
coals. Close the grill to keep in the heat. Add sufficient wet chips to
produce enough smoke that the new neighbors call the fire department, but
not so much that you put out the fire. (Long-time neighbors just bring in
the wash, close their windows and wait him out.)

When the smoke dies down so you can get near the grill, unearth the beast
of honor from the washtub, rub it dry, sprinkle with the lightest coat of
salt and brown sugar, lay the carcass on the grill. Quick, close the lid
and prepare for the rest of the event.

Ice down the rest of the beer in the washtub. (Hell, yes, in the same
water! Just add more ice; eventually the water won't be pink anymore.
Besides, you don't drink the water, now, do you?)

Set up "camp," as it were. Send the kids after whatever you forgot, like
the Coleman lantern, your long-sleeved shirt and the tv-trays. And the
pie-screen, to keep the bugs off the cheese. Those tiny sweet pickles and
another jar of mustard. And that little portable transistor radio, don't
forget the extra batteries.

Every half-hour or so, check the coals and the beast. Add chips to the one
and baste the other. In the beginning, it's easy to keep which is which
straight, but by Saturday afternoon, when this repast is *supposed* to be
ready, the longs hours of no sleep and Lone Star have taken their toll. It
was not uncommon to find wood chips charred to the carcass and the favorite
basting brush singed beyond recognition. (They loved my father down at the
paint store; sold him more 3" bristle brushes than any other two stores'
customers combined.)

After around 3 am, those of us not on bug patrol were no longer awakened by
the "Voice of God", M. L. having tossed it across the highway into the oil
field. I think it gave him no end of joy to imagine that clock coming to
rest next to some aged rattlesnake, vibrating the old viper out of its last
6 buttons, at least.

In the morning, the rest of us would enjoy a good breakfast then wander out
to see how the sacrifice was coming along. Daddy's breakfast empties were
neatly placed back into the wooden case, courtesy the second shift bug
patrol, or my mother. I guess she didn't object to his drinking in public,
as long as he didn't appear to be a slob about it.

He hardly ever used the full case of Pik coils. After midnight or so, no
self-respecting mosquito or fly came with 100 yards of M. L. or the grill.
If the beer didn't do the trick, there was always that marvelous baste
simmering on the back of the grill.

Although the bugs gave Daddy's barbecue a wide berth, he had to quietly let
only a few trusted friends know when he was planning to cook because his
was the absolute best barbecue for miles and miles around. Even his enemies
acknowledged his expertise: "That McLemore is one sorry s.o.b., but
god-almighty, can that man cook!"

Around noon, the friends who were invited and the dogs' pals began to
gather. You know how it is said that dogs and their owners often resemble
one another after a few years of cohabitation? Well, you could certainly
tell which of the 20 or so mutts criss-crossing our yard on barbecue day
belonged to Daddy. They were the ones lapping up spilled Lone Star,
wolfing down stinky cheddar loaded with mustard, and the only ones all the
other dogs refused to sniff.

There's a recipe somewhere in all of this, but danged if I remember where I
put it.

(c) 1996 Martha C. McLemore
 
That's FANTASTIC... Is there a longer version, or is that it?

heh - I don't know if there's a longer version or not. I've seen Robot Chicken enough to figure that there is NOT a longer version.

One of the other favorites from that show was a rip-off of one of the Star Wars movies where Darth Vader started crying and his boss started giving him grief about being such a baby. I'll have to try to find THAT one!

edit : found it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_OQoQ24-v8
 
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Guts or Balls

this one comes from my other sister, the married one:

GUTS OR BALLS

There is a medical distinction. We've all heard about people having
guts or balls, but do you really know the difference between them? In
an effort to keep you informed, the definitions are listed below:

GUTS - Is arriving home late after a night out with the guys, being met
by your wife with a broom, and having the guts to ask: 'Are you still
cleaning, or are you flying off somewhere?'

BALLS - Is coming home late after a night out with the guys, smelling
of perfume and beer, lipstick on your collar
, slapping your wife on
the butt and having the balls to say: 'You're next, Chubby.'

I hope this clears up any confusion on the definitions. Medically
speaking there is no difference in the outcome. Both result in
death.
 
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