Lavabe wrote:captmojo wrote:Home at last! Home at last! Thank God almighty, I'm home at last!
Welcome Home!
Moderator: CameronBornAndBred
Lavabe wrote:captmojo wrote:Home at last! Home at last! Thank God almighty, I'm home at last!
I saw an auto transport truck this morning. I thought of you.captmojo wrote:Thanks all. It starts again tomorrow.
Because a Captain started the thread?bjornolf wrote:Awesome man.
Why is it every time I see this thread, I think of Gilligan's Island?
I think of coconut.bjornolf wrote:Awesome man.
Why is it every time I see this thread, I think of Gilligan's Island?
Hey, now, no racism on this board, damnit. Don't make me get off my couch! ;)devildeac wrote:I think of coconut.bjornolf wrote:Awesome man.
Why is it every time I see this thread, I think of Gilligan's Island?
Or Bugs Bunny.
I'm missing the racism reference.bjornolf wrote:Hey, now, no racism on this board, damnit. Don't make me get off my couch! ;)devildeac wrote:I think of coconut.bjornolf wrote:Awesome man.
Why is it every time I see this thread, I think of Gilligan's Island?
Or Bugs Bunny.
Here's something I didn't know. I found this while looking for a picture of Bugs Bunny.devildeac wrote:I'm missing the racism reference.bjornolf wrote:Hey, now, no racism on this board, damnit. Don't make me get off my couch! ;)devildeac wrote: I think of coconut.
Or Bugs Bunny.
Coconut (macaroon reference)
Bugs Bunny (moron reference)
Don't make me search for that pancake bunny...
As early as the 1650s, enslaved Africans escaped into the American wilderness to form their own separate communities -- a New World adaptation of an African form of resistance. These enslaved Africans set up small communities in swamps or other areas where they were not likely to be discovered. Although most focused on their survival -- building homes, raising crops and livestock, fortifying the community against attack -- others engaged in guerilla warfare against neighboring plantations and provided a base to which other fugitives could flee. The individuals in these communities were called Maroons.
No wonder Looney Tunes went off the air .CameronBornAndBred wrote:Here's something I didn't know. I found this while looking for a picture of Bugs Bunny.devildeac wrote:I'm missing the racism reference.bjornolf wrote: Hey, now, no racism on this board, damnit. Don't make me get off my couch! ;)
Coconut (macaroon reference)
Bugs Bunny (moron reference)
Don't make me search for that pancake bunny...
http://www.uh.edu/naacp/maroon.htmlAs early as the 1650s, enslaved Africans escaped into the American wilderness to form their own separate communities -- a New World adaptation of an African form of resistance. These enslaved Africans set up small communities in swamps or other areas where they were not likely to be discovered. Although most focused on their survival -- building homes, raising crops and livestock, fortifying the community against attack -- others engaged in guerilla warfare against neighboring plantations and provided a base to which other fugitives could flee. The individuals in these communities were called Maroons.
I was looking for this.devildeac wrote:And I posted pancake bunny, not Bugs Bunny, you wascally fellow.
CameronBornAndBred wrote:I was looking for this.devildeac wrote:And I posted pancake bunny, not Bugs Bunny, you wascally fellow.
Ah.CameronBornAndBred wrote:I was looking for this.devildeac wrote:And I posted pancake bunny, not Bugs Bunny, you wascally fellow.
Now that is a good history lesson.bjornolf wrote:My understanding of the situation from a documentary was that it was a thinly veiled reference to "octamaroon" or "octoroon", a derogatory remark used to describe people who were 1/8 black in the post Civil War era. They also used the term "quadroon" to describe someone 1/4 black. I was also aware of the "maroon" reference of the guerilla fighters, but my understanding was that they were referring to the other in bugs bunny. I was joking with the racism reference, though. I knew that wasn't the intent of the poster at all. I thought it was more of a fun history lesson. The interesting thing is that you seldom heard bugs use that phrase in later years of the cartoon.
Wed was: Winston, chapel hole, Raleighlawgrad91 wrote:
Where to tomorrow, Capt?
Capt, you spend a lot of time in my necks of the woods, don't you? If you see a cherry red Saab (most likely) or a British Racing Green Mini, wave cuz it's me!captmojo wrote:Wed was: Winston, chapel hole, Raleighlawgrad91 wrote:
Where to tomorrow, Capt?
Thur: Eden, Martinsville, Salem
Fri: off duty, out of available service hours
3 day weekend. Not really any time off. Too many chores.
We used to do both but no longer have the Chrysler business and Mercury is on the way out. I guess they are still a Lincoln dealer. I've only been there once since they moved into that old Lowe's store, but that;s a HELL of a lot better than what we had to deal with up in Basset Forks.lawgrad91 wrote:
Capt, you spend a lot of time in my necks of the woods, don't you? If you see a cherry red Saab (most likely) or a British Racing Green Mini, wave cuz it's me!
Where do you go in Martinsville, Jim Mills or the Nelson group?
Good luck with the chores!