Check out the "on star" about Boot's grocery on u-tube. Spelled B-o-o-t "comma to the top" s. this store exist and is a few miles from where I duck hunt.
[MEDIA=youtube]Eb9bsy0DOR0[/MEDIA]
Mike Berry, post: 138746, member: 123 wrote: Now Cow...
... I canÛªt argue with you about the sissification of this once great state. I mean, we are one of the first states to have a Death with Dignity law. Death isnÛªt supposed to be dignified, it is supposed to be a full-diapered, bullet bitinÛª fight to a climatic hemorrhaging choking fit.
But our inherent dislike of the Oxford comma stems from our Spartan pioneer roots, where a life or death decision had to made back in Saint Joe on whether to buy another couple barrels of flour for the trip west or a hogshead of commas. Those that went with flour generally made it. Those who bet on commasÛ? well you canÛªt eat commas on a snowy mountain pass in late November.
Homesteaders got used to economizing comma usage until the mid 1860s when bunko steerers, rapscallions and other such riffraff from the played-out California goldmines began bringing up bootleg commas. These charlatans would buy a bushel of used up end-quotes ("), chisel them in two (' '), pound them to grade (, ,) and sell them on the black market as brand new commas. This went on for a decade or two until the vigilantes got the Californians all properly lynched.
Things were peaceful until the 1960s when hippies at the U of C in Berkeley began smuggling commas to the U of O English Department in Eugene. They would hollow out 1 kilo bricks of hashish (legal tender on both campuses) and stuff them full of thousands of commas. The state went wild with commas, so much so that hippie chicks in Eugene even began making clothes out of them:
And thus began our slow declineÛ?
As a California resident and comma enthusiast, I would like to state that the actions of those unscrupulous individuals at UC Berkeley don't reflect the good and honorable actions of much of the rest of the state when it comes to comma usage. Most of us here in the Golden State understand the dangers of transporting commas to environments where they don't belong. The Valley Comma (punctuatus calilfornius centralis) cannot survive for long in higher altitudes and colder temperatures. And those that do manage to survive often exhibit strange mutations in their offspring. And the Coastal Comma (punctuatus westernus coastalis) needs to live in a climate with higher morning humidity and less temperature fluctuation throughout the day. You can't just take commas from region to region any more. The commas today have evolved to be very specific to their native environs. They are very different from the ancestral commas (commus brittania and commus germanus) who were much heartier and able to withstand changes in environment.