Logically speaking: if everyone comes for the figgy pudding, and they won't leave until they get some, but you never stocked any figgy pudding--the party never ends! :aaah:
I think this was exhibited on Phineas and Ferb, and that oddly makes the hobo's reply less random than usual.

It's a Christmas miracle!
 

Dave

Staff member
My mouse wheel started stuttering when I was scrolling. I figured since I've never done it, I should probably take it apart and clean it. So while it works really well now, there was more hair in there than a 70's porno.
 
My mouse wheel started stuttering when I was scrolling. I figured since I've never done it, I should probably take it apart and clean it. So while it works really well now, there was more hair in there than a 70's porno.
I'm not sure whether I'm more :Leyla: about the fact you still have a mouse with an actual wheel, or about the hair.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
Well, yes, yes I was. No mouse I've had has lived long enough to need cleaning of the wheel on top.
I've never had one that cleaning would have benefitted the wheel, but I have had a couple where use and humidity made the wheel SWELL UP to the point it would not turn any more.
 
There's like, this one elderly drug dealer on South Street in Philly, I don't wanna say he's aggressive but he's at the least VERY persistent in trying to get you to get his "free" products. I've met him twice, and each time it was weird, the second time he offered me shrooms and I'm NINETY NINE percent sure said shrooms were Baby Bellas mushrooms from the supermarket.
 
There's like, this one elderly drug dealer on South Street in Philly, I don't wanna say he's aggressive but he's at the least VERY persistent in trying to get you to get his "free" products. I've met him twice, and each time it was weird, the second time he offered me shrooms and I'm NINETY NINE percent sure said shrooms were Baby Bellas mushrooms from the supermarket.
Granted, it's been a few years since I lived there, but my only question is: there's just one?
 
There's like, this one elderly drug dealer on South Street in Philly, I don't wanna say he's aggressive but he's at the least VERY persistent in trying to get you to get his "free" products. I've met him twice, and each time it was weird, the second time he offered me shrooms and I'm NINETY NINE percent sure said shrooms were Baby Bellas mushrooms from the supermarket.
There's only one way to find out. Report back to us afterwards.
 
Oy.

So the other producer reached out to me saying they really would like the story and are there any edits I'd be willing to make, that they could be less extensive than suggested.

The polite thing to do would be to repeat that I'm withdrawing. I decided to tell them to do it the way I want or not at all. Which is really new and weird and hard for me, but my new therapist and I are working on my social anxiety and putting my foot down, so this seemed a good practice case.
 

Dave

Staff member
I'm not sure whether I'm more :Leyla: about the fact you still have a mouse with an actual wheel, or about the hair.
Cat hair. Lots of cat hair. Which had wound its way around the center of the wheel by catching in the spring. I suppose I could take it apart and show you pictures, but I don't care that much and I'm lazy.
 

figmentPez

Staff member
I was skimming a NYT article about the manufacture of glitter. Most of it I was vaguely aware of, but then I found this section I found vaguely disturbing:

When I asked Ms. Dyer if she could tell me which industry served as Glitterex’s biggest market, her answer was instant: “No, I absolutely know that I can’t.”

I was taken aback. “But you know what it is?”

“Oh, God, yes,” she said, and laughed. “And you would never guess it. Let’s just leave it at that.” I asked if she could tell me why she couldn’t tell me. “Because they don’t want anyone to know that it’s glitter.”

“If I looked at it, I wouldn’t know it was glitter?”

“No, not really.”

“Would I be able to see the glitter?”

“Oh, you’d be able to see something. But it’s — yeah, I can’t.”
What the fuck are they putting glitter in that they don't want people to know has glitter in it?

Like, is this just the secret that a lot of the "metal" in tech products is just a coat of paint? I imagine there's glitter in that, but I also don't think that's much of a secret. Or is this something I'd rather not know is full of glitter, like some loophole that allows it to be an unlisted ingredient used to make food look better?
 

figmentPez

Staff member
There's a huge Reddit thread discussing it. I think the most reasonable suggestion is that it's used in security ink for currency, passports, event tickets, identification, etc. (And, now that I think about it, possibly the ink for all sorts of products, with counterfeit goods becoming more common.)

Although people seem pretty hung-up on speculating about military uses, like the chaff used in weapon countermeasures.
 
There is a nearby casino which is promoting their end of 2018 bash with a huge sign reading "The end of the year is here!"
It upsets me greatly that they didn't go with "The end of the year is NYE!" instead.

--Patrick
 

GasBandit

Staff member
I don't understand why IRA contribution limits apply to Roth IRAs. I mean, I know why TRADITIONAL IRAs have contribution limits - the money you put into a Traditional IRA is before-taxes, so the government has an interest in limiting how much money you can shelter from taxation. But Roth IRA contributions are AFTER taxes... so why bother with limiting contributions?
 
I don't understand why IRA contribution limits apply to Roth IRAs. I mean, I know why TRADITIONAL IRAs have contribution limits - the money you put into a Traditional IRA is before-taxes, so the government has an interest in limiting how much money you can shelter from taxation. But Roth IRA contributions are AFTER taxes... so why bother with limiting contributions?
Just don't get drunk and accidently donate to the Irish Republic Army
 
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