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The last post is the WINNER!

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
yeah, I guess that too could describe bacon....glad to see you are coming around to the anti-baconist side
What do you think of pasties?
OIP.SwNC4oqF0iN_9Lmuv6HsuQHaFj
 

sun rise

The world is on fire
Premium Member
In the interest of team building, let me sing a sentence of kumbaya to you:

Fixed that for you...and those things look horrible...but not knowing exactly what is in them..... can't be sure...but if that is bacon...it is horrible

You did not fix it but made it wrong. And they look and taste wonderful. No bacon.
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
Fixed that for you...and those things look horrible...but not knowing exactly what is in them..... can't be sure...but if that is bacon...it is horrible
You think they're "pastries", & not "pasties"?
Oh, the ignorance in NY is epidemic.
Pasty - Wikipedia
Excerpted....
In 2001, a small grocery and caterer in Gaylord, Michigan, Albie's Food, Inc., was sent a cease and desist letter from The J.M. Smucker Co., accusing Albie's of violating their intellectual property rights to the "sealed crustless sandwich". Instead of capitulating, Albie's took the case to federal court, noting in their filings a pocket sandwich with crimped edges and no crust was called a "pasty" and had been a popular dish in northern Michigan since the nineteenth century. Federal Court determined that Albie's Foods did not infringe on J.M. Smucker Co. intellectual property rights and was allowed to continue.[55]
 

Wu Wei

ursus senum severiorum and ex-Bisy Backson
You think they're "pastries", & not "pasties"?
Oh, the ignorance in NY is epidemic.
Pasty - Wikipedia
Excerpted....
In 2001, a small grocery and caterer in Gaylord, Michigan, Albie's Food, Inc., was sent a cease and desist letter from The J.M. Smucker Co., accusing Albie's of violating their intellectual property rights to the "sealed crustless sandwich". Instead of capitulating, Albie's took the case to federal court, noting in their filings a pocket sandwich with crimped edges and no crust was called a "pasty" and had been a popular dish in northern Michigan since the nineteenth century. Federal Court determined that Albie's Foods did not infringe on J.M. Smucker Co. intellectual property rights and was allowed to continue.[55]

no one should take advice or follow the beliefs of a state shaped like a mitten
 
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