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- LeeEsq in reply to Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024How so? We have had repeated use of anti-Semitic imagery and language from certain quarters of the D…
- Saul Degraw in reply to LeeEsq on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024i’m not sure this is true either
- Saul Degraw in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024That is not the remarkable
- Jaybird in reply to LeeEsq on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024I'm just going to repeat this line because it's funny: She was Loyola's Anti Racism Center Fellow fo…
- LeeEsq in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024It's amazing how these things keep happening but there is a code of silence about it.
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- Pinky in reply to LeeEsq on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024Repeated accusations aren't the same thing as repeated use. The genuinely good people on the right w…
- Jaybird in reply to Michael Cain on The Statistical Side of ImmigrationThese guys probably could have gotten busted for weed, but they didn't need a whole lot of entertain…
- Jaybird in reply to LeeEsq on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024It's weird what gets normalized. Loyola University Law School - Grace Obi-Azuike appears to be caugh…
- LeeEsq in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024We Jews might see the repeated use of anti-Semitic imagery against Jews a bit differently than genti…
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(The cold floors?)Report
How long has it been since you spent a winter night in an older home? Hot air rises; cold air sinks; your standard 1900-late 1900’s house was a wooden box built on a stone/concrete basement which is essentially a buried icebox in the winter once the frost set in. Floors in old houses on the ground floor are almost always cold cold cold. Rising to attend the kid and walking over those floors? Brrrr!Report
You remind me of my Grandparents Cain’s house. If the coal-fired furnace in the basement was recently stoked, the first floor was toasty. The second floor, especially at night in the winter, was a whole ‘nother thing. Far from the furnace and drafty old single-pane windows. Sleeping under a sheet, a blanket, another blanket, and a down comforter. Often a stocking cap. Wake up in the morning and the tip of your nose was almost numb. Taught you why the original drawings of Scrooge had him in socks, slippers, and nightcap. I’m sitting here shivering just from remembering.
Then one year they got a gas-fired forced-air furnace and all of that went away.Report
Yeah, I am occasionally struck when reading the older books at how dressed up people were in their evening wear in their home- not out of any sense of fashion but sheer necessity for preservation against the cold. Moderns lounging about in a t-shirt and shorts in all seasons are yet another fruit of modern architecture, heating and insulation technologies.
In fact, I almost wonder if the de-formalizing of dressing norms is partially an artifact of the thermal fact that houses and gathering places are simply warmer now and that wearing many layers of old style fashion has gone from providing a welcome layer of insulation in cool settings to imposing an onerous toll in sweat and discomfort in warmer settings.
My mothers home in Nova Scotia is a century old farm house. The wind would blow right through it when we first moved in. They stripped it, insulated it, vapor barrier-ed it, installed a modern furnace and it still hovers around 70 degrees in most of the place in the winter. Brrr indeed!Report