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A friend who is currently living in her van has been telling me how many more problems there are when the rich are taxed, that poor people have an entitled mentally.

She once had money and still believes all that crap even when she's destitute.

Just heard the words โ€œprivate yellingsโ€ and thatโ€™s how Iโ€™ll be referring to my inner thoughts from now on.

Also...
4th great grandfather John Smith (1760-1812) claimed to have been in the American Revolution and to have been captured by the British and held in a prison ship in Charleston harbor. He claims he escaped and swam away, ended up going home. Did not have papers. A sister and his widow testified he'd served. His widow was trying to get a pension. But either she or the sister said he'd been in the calvary instead of the infantry and that was enough for the pension to be denied.

Thinking about Veterans Day. I have a number of ancestors who fought in wars. I only know of one or two who died, and those were siblings of direct ancestors. Have posted about them all in a short thread.

(2/2) Henry Bertram's unit was at many major battles and was at Appomattox. Another 3rd great uncle Henry Merricks was in the union army, but died of disease before the march on Atlanta had begun.
Three, maybe 4, ancestors in the American Revolution. Capt. Duncan McVicker (1739-1818), Maj. John Cessna (1726-1802), and William Roach (1751-1840). Cessna and McVicker were both at Bunker Hill. Roach at Germantown and Brandywine. Cessna and Roach wintered at Valley Forge.

(1/2) My half brother was special ops during Vietnam War. 19 yrs older than me.
Dad was in the navy in WWII. Was at the bombardment of Okinawan.
My paternal grandfather was in a supply unit in France during WWI, but the war was over before he ever really deployed. He'd been in the Nebraska national guard down in Texas and New Mexico during the Pancho Villa raids.
A great great grandmother's brother Henry Bertram immigrated from Germany in 1860 and by early 1862 he'd enlisted in the union army

Christopher's parents were both dead by the time he reached 20, and he was the oldest of the children. I think that greatly influenced his decision to take in orphans.

Christopher (1852-1924) and Mary Ellen Faherty Ryan (1852-1931) with one of the orphans they took in

Mom would tell me about her grandma Mary Ellen (Faherty) Ryan who died when Mom was one. So she only passed down what she'd heard. Mary played piano in the Catholic church, took in orphans, was a bit messy of a housekeeper (I have that gene), owned a 1926 Velie 6 automobile. There was also an earlier Velie. 1918? She died 93 years ago today. (1852-1931). She's not in the picture of the earlier car unless she's hidden in the back passenger side.

It's only Nov 11 and I'm already counting down to when the butterflies will be back.

American Lady butterfly.

if i won the lottery, i'd give away half of it.

friends/my kiddo & charities.

the other half would buy me comfort & security & the chance to never work w/ assholes again or cater or tolerate assholes again.

what would you do?

Good night all. I must sleep. Hasta lumbago.

@poemblaze Most brands will have a resource for checking the spices for how long they should be good. I write on any containers the date I buy them new. I am bad about stuff siting in my spice rack of things I don't use often or just bought for a specific recipe.

Black Licorice

@poemblaze I've also started buying smaller containers of spices, so I'll replenish more frequently.

@poemblaze All the advice I've seen from actual chefs is, after a year, spices should be replaced.

But, truth be told, for spices that are rarely used, I'll give them a taste when I see something I'm making calls for it, and if it's tasteless, I might still use it, then toss.

I do have some dried spices vacuum sealed and in the freezer. I do that with bay leaves sometimes. They have decent flavor for over a year that way.

โ“Question. Have dug far deeper into the spice cabinet. There are truly ancient things here. I threw away things with expiration dates. Are some spices fine for years as long as they're sealed and dry?

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Thankful Turkey

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