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Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 6:20 am
by Digit
When I were a young'un we were educated Marduk, ( pre the bog standard comprehensive,) and musem visits were included. Along with manners, politeness, and respect, oh happy days! I'm 66 by the way.

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 6:55 am
by marduk
I'm 66 by the way
so you saw these before the age of 13 then back in the dark ages when things like nuclear power were still thought of as a good idea.
you must have seen loads of changes Digit. I love talking to the next generation up. Its always rewarding. I prefer old things generally which is why I'm an original series star trek fan and can't stand the next gen rubbish where everyone always has air conditioning and good lighting when theyre in a shuttle craft
I love it when Its proven I can still do math too so thanks for that
I'm 36 (i think) :lol:

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 7:26 am
by Digit
My lif would either bore you rigid or not, depending on your view of life and what you think life was like when I was younger. Over the last few years I've started, and stopped then restarted writing about my childhood and what life was like after WW2. If you want to see the draft let me know. But my wife says it's never been dull, I was even born in a hail of machine gun bullets!

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 12:59 pm
by stan
I wrote:
But in these parts, these healing waters are no longer
"resorted" to.
Digit wrote:
Not 'resorted' to Stan? Ever heard of Bath?
I was clearly talking about the US....

:roll:

BUt on the subject, do people still resort to Bath in the year of our lord 2006? :shock:

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 1:01 pm
by stan
All hail, 66 year olds!

I do like to sit at your feet. If you can remember Hitler, I'd like to talk to you.

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 1:02 pm
by Digit
So I'm led to believe Stan.

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 1:09 pm
by Digit
Do I remember Hitler? Not personally, no. According to my mother my earliest memory was as a baby of 18 months. I started school at the age of 4 when Britain was being subjected to the 'little blitz'. Having been registered as a pupil I was sent out into the school grounds where I helped to dig slit trenches! I lived on a main arterial road leading to the south coast and crossing that road to school was a nightmare as your countrymen were heading south for the Normandy landings. For a child of my age it was a fantastic time.

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 2:22 pm
by marduk
Image
http://megalithicpoems.blogspot.com/200 ... 23_22.html
it appears in the 1610 edition of Britain
Image
still think this is genuine ?
:lol:

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 8:21 pm
by stan
Do I remember Hitler? Not personally, no. According to my mother my earliest memory was as a baby of 18 months. I started school at the age of 4 when Britain was being subjected to the 'little blitz'. Having been registered as a pupil I was sent out into the school grounds where I helped to dig slit trenches! I lived on a main arterial road leading to the south coast and crossing that road to school was a nightmare as your countrymen were heading south for the Normandy landings. For a child of my age it was a fantastic time.
I'm glad you survived, Digit!

A couple of years ago a man about your age from Germany who is now a naturalized citizen. He was reminiscing and said rather casually,
"Hitler sent us out of the city to live on farms and get away from the bombing."...I nearly fell over, because he was talking about AH the way
someone here might talk about Roosevelt or Truman. Maybe my reaction is hard to understand...but Hitler has always been such a "mythic" figure for me, although I know a lot about the war.

Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 8:46 pm
by Minimalist
stan wrote:All hail, 66 year olds!

I do like to sit at your feet. If you can remember Hitler, I'd like to talk to you.


I knew Hitler's cat.

Image

Posted: Tue Dec 05, 2006 6:37 am
by War Arrow
Minimalist wrote:I knew Hitler's cat.
RAOTFLMAO!!! :lol: :lol: :lol:
You always deliver the goods, Min! If one day someone decides to write a book about this bulletin board, that just has to be the title.

Posted: Tue Dec 05, 2006 12:35 pm
by stan
:D :lol:

So the cat escaped the bunker and is still living in Argentina?

Posted: Tue Dec 05, 2006 1:14 pm
by Digit
Hi Stan. I'll come back to you on the subject of Uncle Adolf in a private post as I don't wish to clog this thread. If you then wish to post any of what I say be my guest.

Posted: Tue Dec 05, 2006 1:40 pm
by marduk
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree ... 17,00.html
I find this theory convincing. The joy of archaeology is that it licenses wild conjecture by subjecting it to the relentless test of science. Here it cries, plus ça change ... In the third millennium BC - as in the third AD - the rich would go anywhere and believe any nonsense if they thought it might win them health and longevity. The Amesbury archer was a Swiss migrant taken by his son to Europe's most famous faith healers, with their magic stones and astronomical mumbo-jumbo. Stonehenge's appeal was not religious. It answered to the simplest of human cravings, the relief of pain and the postponement of death. The Great Cursus points not to heaven but to Harley Street.
Well I had thought I had heard all the crackpot theories but this ones new on me
and what is it with the guardian lately
they seem stonehenge obsessed
:lol:
they've gone all megalithomaniacal
:roll:

Posted: Tue Dec 05, 2006 1:59 pm
by Digit
By the way Marduk, I'm one of the idiots who happens to think that nuclear power is the only current alternative IF CO2 IS the cause of global warming. I just wish some of the people I've met in the industry stopped treating it like overgrown fireworks.