I had two aunts; one dipped and the other chewed.?ÿ Story was she switched to chewing Mail Pouch Tobacco because my cousins kept stealing her dip.?ÿ BTW, they hailed from Freedom, OK, not the panhandle..but close enough for my liking.?ÿ The one that dipped moved to the bustling metropolis of Jet at an early age.
And I never thought of women using tobacco as being any worse than sucking on Marlboros.?ÿ Man...I must be a whole lot more "dub-t" than I thought....
Anyone growing up around Freedom probably believes all dirt is red.
Had a local family who moved here from there.?ÿ That's how I came to know about it before driving through it.
Had to go to the www to work that out:
It's great how these threads meander their way around to what the OP really intended to say.
It was the "dub-t" that sent me to the www.?ÿ Not familiar with that term.
Dub-t is an affectionately used Okie term for the abbreviation "W T".?ÿ "W" being the racial ethnicity of an individual and "T" being the socio-economic status.?ÿ I have heard the term "Whisky Tango" on various frequencies of my police scanner.
This is why we have instructions on shampoo bottles.
The hat is a dead give away.?ÿ It's not a GirRdone kind of hat.
I'd like to still be able to get snuff.
The PC brigade have banned its sale here 🙁
Me, I'm more old punk than Whisky Tango
And 10 gallons of sliced pickles from
We could eat up those pickles!
This fellow told me that CD data storage was only good for about 15 years. I didn't believe him at the time, but I have been noticing an increasing error rate in recovering my own data backed up on CD's about 20 years ago.
CDs are available in wide range of quality, from the cheapies (15?) with a lifetime of 5-10 years to this bad boy, which costs about $1.00.
FalconMedia Century Archival Line CD-R Gold EP has been tested in accelerated aging tests under severe high temperature and high humidity storage conditions based on ISO standards. The results confirm safe storage of data for more than 300 years.
That guy used to work for me.
Keywords: "used to"