wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
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This is your life, and its ending one second at a time
Yes there will be moments of weakness I'm sure.That's a great quote, Prawn.
Wayne, yep, you're right. I wouldn't mind a bit of a bet, though, that you won't be able to stick with this new purist hedonism to the extent that you no longer engage in debate!
I frequently make a similar resolve, but then just get so irritated at the zealots that I succumb once more.
....1. A saying as old as the hills and derived from the biblical books of Ecclesiastes and Isaiah
2. in just a few short years that we will either drown as our continents are sucked down in a whirlpool of rapidly rising sea levels, or shrivel up into burnt and starving crisp as temperatures escalate to Venusesque proportions.
….
Frankly, I no longer care.
3. ...and i thought to myself; life is good. Too good to worry about stuff I have no control over.
I will spend my money on things that make me feel good, whether that is French wine or
4. saving the whales
point 1. btw here is his parable of the corn stalkNovember 23, 2007 -- Democracy now spent hour with one of the world's leading scientists studying climate change, Tim Flannery. An Australian mammologist, palaeontologist and field zoologist, he has discovered and named more than thirty new species of mammals. He has been described as being in the league of all-time great explorers such as David Livingstone.
Flannery might be best known as the author of the bestselling book "The Weather Makers: The History and Future Impact of Climate Change." Earlier this year he was named 2007 Australian of the Year. Tim Flannery recently spoke before a packed crowd at the Lensic Theater in Santa Fe New Mexico as part of "Readings and Conversations," a series sponsored by the Lannan Foundation. Tim Flannery spoke on the environment, how human activity is altering the earth's climate and what we can do to save it
Or eat supermarket food.Life is too short to drink bad wine.
2020
When one dog lays a turd on the footpath, other dogs come along and stick their nose in it.
I don't know why this is, don't care, it just is. The fact that dogs does this should not be irritating as it is the natural order.
I laid a turd on the footpath, specifically because I knew you would come along and stick your nose in it. I don't know why this is, don't care, it just is.
But the fact of the matter is that I have moved on down the road, and you have dog turd on your nose...
...and I am happy because this is just how things are. It is the natural order, how it should be.
Cheers
Or if you can only afford the occasional good wine - as a friend of mine says - "in life, drink the best wine first".Life is too short to drink bad wine.
...
So I've made a 7.5 months past new year's resolution: From now on I refuse to argue about AGW, house prices, BEAR MARKETS, or other future events that will or won't reveal themselves despite what I or anyone else says. I will be impressively happy and uncaring.
.
Eat, drink, agitate and die. ...err and yep, be merry.
Good luck with your cathartic endeavours my friend.
wayneL said:I survived another day. This green and pleasant land managed to fend off the cruel sea one more time. The temperature managed to stay below 150 º (In fact, it was a tad chilly when the sun was behind the clouds).
I ate, drank, and was indeed merry.
Life is still good.
Dogs still stick there noses in turds.
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