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#1
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On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 21:15:45 -0500, HK wrote:
Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 18:37:04 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: Colored spotlights, inflatable figures, plastic candy canes............the list is endless! ;-) Neon palm trees and flamingos are very popular here in south Florida. (not home yet but making good progress) One of the aspects of Florida I enjoyed the most when I lived there was the absolute tastelessness on exhibit almost everywhere. I happened to be in one dipstick Florida town one holiday season and got to see its annual Christmas parade, in which the various fundie church congregations ran floats depicting the crucifixion. Yes, they had live guys up there on the cross. Well, gag me with a spoon. Harry, I was raised Roman Catholic, have been to many religious festivals and parades, and have lived all over this country and several different parts of the world. I've never seen or heard of a live person displayed on a cross, except at Oberammergau, Germany. In the past couple weeks you've described two such incidents. Remarkable. -- John H |
#2
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John H. wrote:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 21:15:45 -0500, HK wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 18:37:04 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: Colored spotlights, inflatable figures, plastic candy canes............the list is endless! ;-) Neon palm trees and flamingos are very popular here in south Florida. (not home yet but making good progress) One of the aspects of Florida I enjoyed the most when I lived there was the absolute tastelessness on exhibit almost everywhere. I happened to be in one dipstick Florida town one holiday season and got to see its annual Christmas parade, in which the various fundie church congregations ran floats depicting the crucifixion. Yes, they had live guys up there on the cross. Well, gag me with a spoon. Harry, I was raised Roman Catholic, have been to many religious festivals and parades, and have lived all over this country and several different parts of the world. I've never seen or heard of a live person displayed on a cross, except at Oberammergau, Germany. In the past couple weeks you've described two such incidents. Remarkable. It is done in Latin communities and is hundreds of years old, it definitely is not a fundie type thing. My guess is Harry saw a photo of it, and really didn't understand what it was, and just guessed that it was a fundie thing. |
#3
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On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:11:10 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
wrote: John H. wrote: On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 21:15:45 -0500, HK wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 18:37:04 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: Colored spotlights, inflatable figures, plastic candy canes............the list is endless! ;-) Neon palm trees and flamingos are very popular here in south Florida. (not home yet but making good progress) One of the aspects of Florida I enjoyed the most when I lived there was the absolute tastelessness on exhibit almost everywhere. I happened to be in one dipstick Florida town one holiday season and got to see its annual Christmas parade, in which the various fundie church congregations ran floats depicting the crucifixion. Yes, they had live guys up there on the cross. Well, gag me with a spoon. Harry, I was raised Roman Catholic, have been to many religious festivals and parades, and have lived all over this country and several different parts of the world. I've never seen or heard of a live person displayed on a cross, except at Oberammergau, Germany. In the past couple weeks you've described two such incidents. Remarkable. It is done in Latin communities and is hundreds of years old, it definitely is not a fundie type thing. My guess is Harry saw a photo of it, and really didn't understand what it was, and just guessed that it was a fundie thing. Interesting. I lived for three years in Puerto Rico. Must have just missed it. I know Harry wouldn't lie or anything, but I did find it remarkable. -- John H |
#4
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![]() "John H." wrote in message news ![]() Interesting. I lived for three years in Puerto Rico. Must have just missed it. Where and when? I was stationed at Fort Allen (the Navy's only "|Fort") in Ponce. I think it was from about 1972 to 1974 or thereabouts. Eisboch |
#5
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On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:36:04 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote:
"John H." wrote in message news ![]() Interesting. I lived for three years in Puerto Rico. Must have just missed it. Where and when? I was stationed at Fort Allen (the Navy's only "|Fort") in Ponce. I think it was from about 1972 to 1974 or thereabouts. Eisboch I was at Ramey AFB from 1951-1954. We lived in Isabella for a couple years and then moved on base when quarters became available. Ponce rings a bell, but I can't remember why. Maybe it was a place to visit as a tourist. Our big treat was going to the beach at Aguadilla. Once we moved on base, the big treat was being awakened by B-36's taking off! Noisy buggers! -- John H |
#6
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![]() "John H." wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:36:04 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "John H." wrote in message news ![]() Interesting. I lived for three years in Puerto Rico. Must have just missed it. Where and when? I was stationed at Fort Allen (the Navy's only "|Fort") in Ponce. I think it was from about 1972 to 1974 or thereabouts. Eisboch I was at Ramey AFB from 1951-1954. We lived in Isabella for a couple years and then moved on base when quarters became available. Ponce rings a bell, but I can't remember why. Maybe it was a place to visit as a tourist. Our big treat was going to the beach at Aguadilla. Once we moved on base, the big treat was being awakened by B-36's taking off! Noisy buggers! -- John H Ponce is on the south side of the island. Fort Allen was a small transmitter site back when HF was the primary means of communications to the fleet. It also had a relay transciever that we maintained for Air Force One communications. We had a good time there but were happy to leave. Driving up and down the rain forest mountains to San Juan was always an adventure. http://welcome.topuertorico.org/city/ponce.shtml Eisboch |
#7
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"Eisboch" wrote in message
... "John H." wrote in message ... On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:36:04 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "John H." wrote in message news ![]() Interesting. I lived for three years in Puerto Rico. Must have just missed it. Where and when? I was stationed at Fort Allen (the Navy's only "|Fort") in Ponce. I think it was from about 1972 to 1974 or thereabouts. Eisboch I was at Ramey AFB from 1951-1954. We lived in Isabella for a couple years and then moved on base when quarters became available. Ponce rings a bell, but I can't remember why. Maybe it was a place to visit as a tourist. Our big treat was going to the beach at Aguadilla. Once we moved on base, the big treat was being awakened by B-36's taking off! Noisy buggers! -- John H Ponce is on the south side of the island. Fort Allen was a small transmitter site back when HF was the primary means of communications to the fleet. It also had a relay transciever that we maintained for Air Force One communications. We had a good time there but were happy to leave. Driving up and down the rain forest mountains to San Juan was always an adventure. Between road conditions and drivers who think they're god, it's still an adventure! |
#8
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On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 08:20:56 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote:
"John H." wrote in message .. . On Tue, 27 Nov 2007 07:36:04 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "John H." wrote in message news ![]() Interesting. I lived for three years in Puerto Rico. Must have just missed it. Where and when? I was stationed at Fort Allen (the Navy's only "|Fort") in Ponce. I think it was from about 1972 to 1974 or thereabouts. Eisboch I was at Ramey AFB from 1951-1954. We lived in Isabella for a couple years and then moved on base when quarters became available. Ponce rings a bell, but I can't remember why. Maybe it was a place to visit as a tourist. Our big treat was going to the beach at Aguadilla. Once we moved on base, the big treat was being awakened by B-36's taking off! Noisy buggers! -- John H Ponce is on the south side of the island. Fort Allen was a small transmitter site back when HF was the primary means of communications to the fleet. It also had a relay transciever that we maintained for Air Force One communications. We had a good time there but were happy to leave. Driving up and down the rain forest mountains to San Juan was always an adventure. http://welcome.topuertorico.org/city/ponce.shtml Eisboch My dad and I did a lot of inland fishing while there. Catfish was a regular meal on Friday's, for the whole neighborhood when we lived on base. We would go bass fishing at another lake. Never caught as many bass. I believe the Puerto Ricans, at that time anyway, were not eaters of fresh water fish, so these lakes had plenty of fish and very few people fishing. I was happy to leave also. -- John H |
#9
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Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
John H. wrote: On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 21:15:45 -0500, HK wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 18:37:04 -0500, " JimH" ask wrote: Colored spotlights, inflatable figures, plastic candy canes............the list is endless! ;-) Neon palm trees and flamingos are very popular here in south Florida. (not home yet but making good progress) One of the aspects of Florida I enjoyed the most when I lived there was the absolute tastelessness on exhibit almost everywhere. I happened to be in one dipstick Florida town one holiday season and got to see its annual Christmas parade, in which the various fundie church congregations ran floats depicting the crucifixion. Yes, they had live guys up there on the cross. Well, gag me with a spoon. Harry, I was raised Roman Catholic, have been to many religious festivals and parades, and have lived all over this country and several different parts of the world. I've never seen or heard of a live person displayed on a cross, except at Oberammergau, Germany. In the past couple weeks you've described two such incidents. Remarkable. It is done in Latin communities and is hundreds of years old, it definitely is not a fundie type thing. My guess is Harry saw a photo of it, and really didn't understand what it was, and just guessed that it was a fundie thing. Your guess is wrong, crap for brains, and it wasn't in a "Latin" community. |
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