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spidermage
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Joined: 13 May 2008
Posts: 4423

PostPosted: Tue Aug 25, 2009 11:06 am    Post subject: Re: Hi, Hello, and How Do You Do? Reply with quote

simpleton01 wrote:
simpleton01 welcomes you!



And we welcome you right back.

Been up to much?

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spidermage
Wasp Star


Joined: 13 May 2008
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PostPosted: Tue Aug 25, 2009 11:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Spastic Minnow wrote:
swear in MODERATION!

otherwise I either have to close the dam thread or edit your posts, or will have to add a dumb-arse censorship filter again.


Sorry, Spas, I've searched everywhere but I can't find the MODERATION! thread. Can you provide a link?

Or did you mean' swear at the moderator'?

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Herr Doktor Kauboi
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Joined: 25 Feb 2009
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 2:37 pm    Post subject: I was born with contempt for everything and everyone Reply with quote

I return now from a trip to Appalachia, where I performed anthropological research. From my journal:

Ghost stories are a staple of daily conversation here in the foothills of the Appalachians. To the academician visiting from the piedmont, it’s quite exciting at first. He is sure these traditional tales paint a rich portrait of a world as densely populated by minor deities as any South Sea island, an animistic bestiary of transplanted Celtic spirits barely held in check by a cruel and bloodthirsty version of the Old Testament God. The reality is a bitter disappointment. There is nothing particularly interesting or even frightening to the modern mind in these simplistic yarns of “haunts” and “boogers.” Some are plaintive tales of unrequited passion (I hesitate to use the phrase “star-crossed” to describe the furtive couplings of poultry maids and illiterate subsistence farmers). Other tales are reminders of clan disputes from generations past, tales the denizens of these hills recount more to warm themselves with ancestral "grudges" than to chill the blood of their listeners. Not surprisingly, the most imaginative and entertaining among all of these tales are the more recent fabrications of “moon-shiners,” stories that serve as folkloric scarecrows warning innocent neighbors away from illegal distilleries. These tales elucidate specific punishments the “spirits of the dead” will exact upon the living. These punishments are sometimes expressed as precise descriptions of wounds produced by moon-shiners’ mantraps. The other tales from the region are ridiculously thin in this regard, indistinguishable one from another due to the paucity of the climax: the ghost will “get” the haunted. That is all. There is nothing further. Questions as to what this “getting” entails are met with blank stares because this “getting,” which may or may not include physical harm, is sufficient to squelch the dim doubts of these witless agrarians. They are frightened of being frightened, the exact sort of nonsense our President Roosevelt warned against in his inaugural address, just weeks before I first came to this region. He was speaking, of course, to the current economic conditions, but I would argue that his sentiment could be applied with equanimity to the superstitions of the hill-folk.

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miles aweigh
Nonsuch


Joined: 18 May 2008
Posts: 1657
Location: Emerald City

PostPosted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 2:53 pm    Post subject: Re: I was born with contempt for everything and everyone Reply with quote

Herr Doktor Kauboi wrote:
I return now from a trip to Appalachia, where I performed anthropological research. From my journal:

Ghost stories are a staple of daily conversation here in the foothills of the Appalachians. To the academician visiting from the piedmont, it’s quite exciting at first. He is sure these traditional tales paint a rich portrait of a world as densely populated by minor deities as any South Sea island, an animistic bestiary of transplanted Celtic spirits barely held in check by a cruel and bloodthirsty version of the Old Testament God. The reality is a bitter disappointment. There is nothing particularly interesting or even frightening to the modern mind in these simplistic yarns of “haunts” and “boogers.” Some are plaintive tales of unrequited passion (I hesitate to use the phrase “star-crossed” to describe the furtive couplings of poultry maids and illiterate subsistence farmers). Other tales are reminders of clan disputes from generations past, tales the denizens of these hills recount more to warm themselves with ancestral "grudges" than to chill the blood of their listeners. Not surprisingly, the most imaginative and entertaining among all of these tales are the more recent fabrications of “moon-shiners,” stories that serve as folkloric scarecrows warning innocent neighbors away from illegal distilleries. These tales elucidate specific punishments the “spirits of the dead” will exact upon the living. These punishments are sometimes expressed as precise descriptions of wounds produced by moon-shiners’ mantraps. The other tales from the region are ridiculously thin in this regard, indistinguishable one from another due to the paucity of the climax: the ghost will “get” the haunted. That is all. There is nothing further. Questions as to what this “getting” entails are met with blank stares because this “getting,” which may or may not include physical harm, is sufficient to squelch the dim doubts of these witless agrarians. They are frightened of being frightened, the exact sort of nonsense our President Roosevelt warned against in his inaugural address, just weeks before I first came to this region. He was speaking, of course, to the current economic conditions, but I would argue that his sentiment could be applied with equanimity to the superstitions of the hill-folk.


Doktor, you are older than I thought. One other bit about moonshine lore. According to a friend of mine the whole muscle car, Smokey and the Bandit mythos became so prominent in the south because of the constant game of moonshiners evading the law, local or feds. With fast enough cars they could outrun the authorities, so it served a practical purpose.

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Herr Doktor Kauboi
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Joined: 25 Feb 2009
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 3:24 pm    Post subject: Das ist richtig, meine freund! Reply with quote

Das ist richtig, meine freund!

Dawsonville, Ga., in the foothills of the Appalachians, is indeed the home of stock car racing, and for the very reasons you have cited.

The "downtown" of this sleepy little mountain hamlet was originally an oval track around the county courthouse!

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In the evenings, the people poured motor oil on the road to keep down the dust, and "moon-shiners," as they are still called, raced their motorcars around the county seat.

In recent years, such stock car luminaries as Bill Elliot have come from this town. In fact, it is difficult to swing a dead cat in that town without hitting a picture of Bill Elliot. Being unfamiliar with the true meaning of this English idiom, I have tried to do so. I have been asked not to return.

But that was during the Johnson administration. Perhaps I can return now...

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Herr Doktor Kauboi
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Joined: 25 Feb 2009
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 3:46 am    Post subject: Perhaps it was Kaiser Bill. Good old Kaiser Bill! Reply with quote

Come to think of it, it could not have been the Johnson administration...Bill Elliot would have been a child at the time. It was some mountain village in which I swung dead cats at someone's picture...oh, well. It doesn't matter.

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paranoid android
The Big Express


Joined: 14 May 2008
Posts: 565
Location: edinburgh

PostPosted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 3:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

How d'you do, folks! Smile

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miles aweigh
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Joined: 18 May 2008
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 25, 2009 4:55 pm    Post subject: Re: Perhaps it was Kaiser Bill. Good old Kaiser Bill! Reply with quote

Herr Doktor Kauboi wrote:
Come to think of it, it could not have been the Johnson administration...Bill Elliot would have been a child at the time. It was some mountain village in which I swung dead cats at someone's picture...oh, well. It doesn't matter.


Herr Doktor, I am curious if you possess a time traveling conveyance or just benefit from a longer lifespan than the rest of us.

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Herr Doktor Kauboi
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Joined: 25 Feb 2009
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 4:36 am    Post subject: And not just in my dreams.... Reply with quote

miles aweigh wrote:
Herr Doktor Kauboi wrote:
Come to think of it, it could not have been the Johnson administration...Bill Elliot would have been a child at the time. It was some mountain village in which I swung dead cats at someone's picture...oh, well. It doesn't matter.


Herr Doktor, I am curious if you possess a time traveling conveyance or just benefit from a longer lifespan than the rest of us.


A Zeitreisemaschine? Oh, I had one. It had two settings: "futuristic dystopian allegory" and "unchangeable, paradox-free past." Ultimately, I found it unsatisfying. I ended up using it to send all my empty schnapps bottles to 3:43 p.m., June 17, 2029. You will be glad of them because you will be able to save water distilled from your own recycled urine and from the festering juices of the ravening zombie horde.
No need to thank me at present. After all, I'll be seeing you then. And I will want a return favor...

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AnotherSatellite
The Big Express


Joined: 09 May 2008
Posts: 665
Location: Mobile, AL, USA (Gulf Coast)

PostPosted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 4:46 am    Post subject: no, he didn't Reply with quote

Hi, paranoid android!

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paranoid android
The Big Express


Joined: 14 May 2008
Posts: 565
Location: edinburgh

PostPosted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 7:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hey there, Another Satellite! Wink

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Mare
Mummer


Joined: 10 May 2008
Posts: 442
Location: Alta Loma, California

PostPosted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Perhaps it was Kaiser Bill. Good old Kaiser Bill! Reply with quote

Herr Doktor Kauboi wrote:
Come to think of it, it could not have been the Johnson administration...Bill Elliot would have been a child at the time. It was some mountain village in which I swung dead cats at someone's picture...oh, well. It doesn't matter.


Billiott isn't THAT old, mine Herr Doktor. Heck, he's only three years older than I am. They do have a Mountain Moonshine Festival in his native Dawsonville, though. Does that make him a Hill Billiott?

Swinging Dead Cats. Idea Sounds like a good band name. Swinging live ones is more of a challenge. Twisted Evil

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