ROTFLMAO
You obviously haven’t been in the right houses … we have farting contests around here
God save you if we make bean burritos … ![]()
ROTFLMAO
You obviously haven’t been in the right houses … we have farting contests around here
God save you if we make bean burritos … ![]()
“Bashing” is qualitatively different from perpetual campaigning and what’s going on now. A lot of Democrats voted in favor of bills supported by Reagan. There’s nothing wrong with criticism and disagreement, but there was a point at which parties did work together.
You could feel the change happening with people like Newt Gingrich and Karl Rove coming into prominence in the 1990s. During the last couple of years of Clinton’s term, Orrin Hatch, who was chairman of the Judiciary Committee, basically said that no judicial appointees would get through, no matter what, until there was a new president. As soon as Obama took office, McConnell said that his primary goal was to ensure that Obama wouldn’t get re-elected. Since that time, Republicans have voted in lock-step against any Obama initiative and the Senate Republicans have basically made the filibuster the status quo for everything. Things were not like that during Reagan’s administration, not by a long shot.
A new thing that I’ve learned from this thread - US Americans are kind of touchy about how other people see their country. 
No we’re not! You take that back!
I just learned that Reagan was a contemporary of John Adams. Which explains a lot.
Sorry! Sorry! Sheesh.
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I seriously doubt this is what you learned from the SDMB. I can fathom how you may use what you read on the SDMB to reinforce these stereotypes (as a form of cognitive dissonance advoidance) , but these are stereotypes about Americans learned elsewhere. I am American and I do not think or feel any of those things.
I almost peed my pants, hahaha. That is exactly what I think too!
As an american seriously this is nothing but make work, get on the blister card bandwagon america!
Nope, see post 36. We know there’s a lot of guns in America, but neither your media nor the news give any hindsight in how American society feels about them; the SDMB does. As for the fundies, we’ve heard of them, but we think they’re about as “normal”* as an Almodóvar character… turns out they really, actually, are normal (I learned it by living in the US, but for people who haven’t, I can see learning it here rather than from media - again, media doesn’t show this). I’ve never met someone outside the US who believed the Earth is flat “because the Bible tells me so”, and who felt the need to instruct others in this belief: in the US it really is a measurable fraction of the population.
The fact that some people pronounce those words the same.
Only 1 med I take comes blister pack - frova. Everything else is counted out and in bottles because the dose I take is customized to me, so I get a specific number of doses per 3 months. Someone else might get a different dose and number of doses [frex my clonidine comes in 2 different pills because they don’t have a pill in the specific dose I need] Though to be honest, if I had the money I would have a compounding pharmacy custom make my meds so I only have to hork down 1 large capsule every morning instead of a handfull of pills.
I’ve learned a lot of mundane things, like: ADSL router-modem combos aren’t ubiquitous, and that Americans get charged to receive calls on their cell phones.
Same same in Canada. We don’t have any issues with the word “toilet,” but it just doesn’t mean the room; it means the fixture. There’s nothing at all rude with saying “He left the toilet seat up” or “I was cleaning the toilet” or “Our landlord installed a new low-flow toilet,” but it just isn’t the word for bathroom. If someone says “Where’s the toilet?” it’s not, like, shocking, it just sounds odd (like the response should be “In the bathroom, where did you expect?”)
Oh well then thank you princess for being good enough to straighten me out. :rolleyes:
It’s a child safety issue. It is required by law that any medication dispensed via prescription be provided in a child proof top bottle or child safe blister pack unless otherwise requested by the customer. (my husband is a pharmacy student
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Here is a little background on it
http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/384.pdf
sarcasm meter off the charts*
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I have noticed that in the US it’s usually called a Restroom, whereas in Canada it’s usually called a Washroom. That’s a little off-topic, sure, but what the hey!
That the level of rancour in US politics isn’t just ideological, it’s sectarian.