- Messages
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- Location
- East of Los Angeles
Gahhh, you're killin' me here...and making me hungry at the same time!Aw, thank you! You'd be welcome! (I also served red cabbage, which in my mind is the trifecta.)...
Gahhh, you're killin' me here...and making me hungry at the same time!Aw, thank you! You'd be welcome! (I also served red cabbage, which in my mind is the trifecta.)...
Yeah, remaining-stock-market, selling single pieces!
Get in, grab one single LR626-battery for your wristwatch, pay 1 Euro and get out, beeing lucky. Good joke, isn't it?
In addition to those, we have a slew of "99¢ Store" shops that sell low-end overstock goods for, you guessed it, 99¢. Years ago I walked into one of these stores, and in the entryway they had a huge sign hanging from the ceiling that said:
"If any item in this store has a price tag on it that is higher than 99¢, it is 99¢."
"If any item in this store has a price tag on it that is lower than 99¢, it is 99¢."
"Everything in this store is 99¢."
Apparently, some of their customers were unable to grasp the concept.
We have the same law here in California, so I'm not sure exactly how the 99¢ Store got around that unless hanging that sign that stated "Everything in this store is 99¢" was sufficient for them to be in compliance.All makes sense to me, but in NY, an item can not be rung up for more than the price marked on it or on the shelf identifying it. Stores seem so scared of the regulators on this one, that they bend over backwards to give the customer the better price.
Got up bright and early this morning for the roofers. Waited and waited, finally called them at 11:30, said they would be here around 1:30. No show, then he said 3:00-3:30, I said can you finish it in a couple of hours, he said yes. 4:00 still no roofers, called him again, said it would be first thing in the morning! Had to climb back up on the roof, caring all the bricks, cinder blocks and 2x2s, to weight down the tarp! So two days down the drain this week. I am so tired of contractors.
And there was me under the illusion that being stood up by contractors was a British malaise.Got up bright and early this morning for the roofers. Waited and waited, finally called them at 11:30, said they would be here around 1:30. No show, then he said 3:00-3:30, I said can you finish it in a couple of hours, he said yes. 4:00 still no roofers, called him again, said it would be first thing in the morning! Had to climb back up on the roof, caring all the bricks, cinder blocks and 2x2s, to weight down the tarp! So two days down the drain this week. I am so tired of contractors.
After I cancelled a credit card a few years ago, my credit ratting went way down! I always payed it off in full every month without fail. Absolutely ridiculous.And there was me under the illusion that being stood up by contractors was a British malaise.
Today, I closed my credit card account. It took almost 45 minutes. My card, with the British bank Barclays, is known as a Barclaycard. They were the first to introduce credit cards to the UK and did so back in 1966. Mine was issued to me in that year with a strong finger wagging from my branch bank manager not to go overdrawn on my bank account again. Ha! Telling a penniless student to be financially prudent. My first credit limit was just fifty pounds, my credit limit when I closed the account was a quarter of a million. For the last twenty years or so, I've used the card for business rather than apply for a business card. Sometimes the weekly spend could reach six figures, that's why my credit rating was so high, that and the fact that the balance was always cleared, no debt ever incurred.
Three years ago, my credit card became something new, something I didn't ask for. It has the contactless technology that allows the holder to simply tap the card at the terminal without having to type in any security information. Not wishing to have this technology I cut the card up and sent it back. A new card was issued, but again it had the touch & go technology. The card hasn't been used since.
Today I closed the account and in doing so, I seem to have thrown a spanner in the works. Back in 1966, credit cards weren't issued to those whom the banks deemed high risk, like penniless students, so practically every card holder would have been in their mid thirties or older, my application, if you can call it that, the branch manager simply crossed out all the questions and signed it off, so my card was issued.
So what has caused all the fuss? Those early account holders have, it seems, all past away leaving me the longest living card holder, despite that, they still cannot issue me with a card without the contactless technology. So fifty-one years of trading came to an end today. Despite their protests that the touch and go technology is safe, I disagreed. If I can spend vast amounts with the card previously and my custom was appreciated, why must I accept the new technology?
Something tells me that this is not the end.
You can't have a credit rating if you have no credit to rate.After I cancelled a credit card a few years ago, my credit ratting went way down! I always payed it off in full every month without fail. Absolutely ridiculous.
The American use of the term 'un' has become common place here. When fuel, as in petrol (gas) became know as unleaded, it grated on the ear of older people simply because if the additive in the fuel is left out, how can you unlead something that wasn't there in the first place. Alas, unleaded is now an everyday common place word.I know it's trivial, but I still cringe when I hear "disrespect" used as a verb. Maybe it's because it originated on the street. I mean, it makes perfect sense: if "respect" can be either a noun or a verb, why not disrespect? It still bothers me.