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Thursday, April 20, 2023

stuff is.

 Existence does not depend upon knowledge.
Stuff is (and was) whether you know it or not, and however you twist it.
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, did it make a noise?
What a question.
Anyway, 
Ahh! is from an answer,
Hmm is a question you almost have an answer to, but you need to ruminate.
"What?"
"Whut?"
"ble?" are variations on a theme.

"Ble" is my favorite. It implies that you've just heard something so dense, so opaque, you have no words to even form a formless question in your mind.

Years ago, people learned about quantum physics and had several statements to make, which were proven wrong later. (I, hubris-type that I is, think of "Black holes" that way)
But they went down in history being hard to disprove without knowing the language(s) they invented.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/06/technology/what-is-quantum-computer.html
(why not sic your computer on understandable quantum-speech?)




"El baƱo esta en iscierda ("Izquierda") de la calle tres kilometros de aqui"
(Ble?)

By the way BTW, it is not "Stuff is", like I forgot a word, it's "Stuff is," whether or not you acknowledge it.



Do you like angel hair Pasta? That transparent stuff with no taste?
Apparently people do.
I'm currently eating "Large shells", chewy and they hang on to sauces and meats well.
I had more ranty things to say but I got distracted....People cry on thanksgiving when you serve them angel-hair with shrimp, instead of turkey.
In other words, this biggie world is full of different tastes and traditions (and yours really suck)

Peanut-butter soup, bird-fetuses

Pickled pigs' feet, giblets, gizzards necks, 
Did I ever tell the one about the cleaning staff gathering the remains after one of those big-ass parties?
I was thinking more of cows and pigs on spits, but whatever

modern poseurs



Ya'd think someone would have King Ulbrecht (whoever) grasping a leg in one hand, a goblet of mead in the other hand.
Quora (and some video game) to the rescue



Before Silverware. (utensils).
But noooo.

Now think, what could have been left?
Toes, necks, eyes...
And when the rich people saw how much people enjoyed it, they taxed it and called it a delicacy. (Or something)

Some guy wrote on the history of forks! You're lucky.
Mine was neither history nor factual, it's a lot like the pictures I included: fanciful.
The fork-guy starts out saying Greeks and Romans had them, then kind of drifts into the byzantine empire, says the US didn't use forks til the late 1700's.


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