Random thoughts

Lucy

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This is a place for random thoughts/observations I have been thinking about. The list is getting long in my head. Needed some place to put it. Some of them are questions I haven't looked up the answers to yet but I am curious about. People can add their own if they wish.

Why does our interstate have a speed limit but the Autobahn doesn't?

If you’re 'up' for something, you’re usually happy about it. If you’re 'down' for something, you’re also usually happy about it. English is weird.

If you think about it, your birthday is just the anniversary of the day you were evicted from your first apartment.

We call it 'the news,' but it’s almost always just stuff that happened yesterday.

If you’re waiting for the waiter at a restaurant, aren't you the waiter?

If money is at the root of all evil, why do churches ask for it?

Humans are the only species that pay to live!

The banana used to be the food that most looked like a phone. Now it’s the pop tart.

In order to fall asleep we have to pretend to be asleep.

Why are people so afraid to make mistakes when it is how we learn?

Why is it easier to offer forgiveness to others than it is to forgive yourself?

Why did certain countries develop deeply rooted tipping cultures, while others view tipping as an insult?

Why are certain national borders drawn in perfectly straight geometric lines instead of following natural landscapes?

Why do some countries design cities for pedestrians and bicycles, while others build exclusively for cars?

Why do certain nations use entirely unique electrical plug types and voltages instead of a global standard?

Why do certain nations completely eliminate standardized testing in schools, while others base a student's entire future on a single exam?

Why are there no street names or house numbers in the postal system of Costa Rica?

Why does Norway deliberately choose to store its massive oil wealth in a giant global fund instead of spending it domestically?

Why is it considered a major insult to show the soles of your shoes to someone in Middle Eastern cultures?

Why do people in Finland routinely leave their sleeping babies in strollers outside in sub-zero temperatures?

Why does the tiny nation of Tuvalu earn millions of dollars a year just from owning the ".tv" internet domain?

Why does Germany still heavily rely on cash payments for daily transactions while neighboring nations have gone almost entirely cashless?

Why is it tradition in Denmark to splash cinnamon all over single people on their 25th birthday?

Why do France and Spain trade ownership of a single island (Pheasant Island) back and forth every six months?

Why are traditional houses in the Netherlands built with prominent iron hooks sticking out of their top roofs?

Why are historical buildings in Prague marked with unique animal symbols (like a golden horseshoe or a red fox) instead of standard street numbers?

Why do farmers in Peru grow thousands of varieties of potatoes at different altitudes rather than focusing on the single highest-yielding crop?

(More questions and stuff to come.)
 

Lucy

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How does the insect get inside the Mexican Jumping bean?

Who was the first human to look at a cow and think, "I wonder what that white stuff tastes like coming out of the udder?

Why can turtles carry Salmonella bacteria in their intestinal tract and it not make them sick?

How is it that our government can print money from nothing? and do other governments do that?

Did we really have founding fathers?

Who decided red meant stop and green meant go?

Why was Venice built on stilts?

Why are manhole covers round?

Why do some monks fast for such long periods?

Why does the rest of the world seem to use military time in every day life but we don't?

Who established the international date line?
 

Jade

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Those are a lot of questions, Lucy, some may answer your questions...however, I'll give you one the rest search on the internet and everything will be answer.

Who established the international date line?

answer: The International Meridian Conference in 1884 in Washington, DC as an imaginary line following the 180-degree meridian, marking the boundary between one calendar and the next.
 
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@Lucy. The Bible verse that you are (probably) referring to, comes from 1 Timothy 6:10.
"For the love of money is the root of all evil; which while some have coveted after it, they have erred in faith; and pierced themselves through with many sorrows."

The verse is telling us to keep money in the proper place in our lives; and not be greedy; not that money itself is bad. Jesus was taught to be a carpenter by his foster father, Joseph. Peter was a fisherman, when he first met Jesus. Matthew was a tax collector (which was even more hated back then; because they represented the foreign-occupying power of Rome--and Scripture tells us that Matthew left that job when he became a disciple of Jesus) but I assure you all these people expected to be paid for the services they provided.

The reason that most churches have a tax exempt status is that they don't own the land they are on; and they have no way to generate enough money to pay those kinds of taxes; and anything that they make or sell or any collections of money, food, or clothing that they might take up go to benefit the needs of the congregation and their communities.

But, this was always the way it was. Remember, what you and I consider the Early Christian Church was actually rooted in the Jewish religion. Remember that Joseph, Mary (Mother of Jesus) Jesus, Himself, and all of the original 12 disciples (including Matthew, the tax collector) were all Jewish and followed the Scriptures of the Torah (which is the first five books of the Old Testament of our Christian Bible). So when you read a verse that says,"Take care of the widow and the orphan" it was the local Synagogue or the Temple in Jerusalem that did that. Not the foreign-occupying force of the Roman government. 🙂
 

Lucy

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I really like Jade's idea of making a "What I Learned" series. But I've realized I have way too many questions floating around in my head that I want to explore. So I figured this thread could be my place to collect them.

I also wanted to add something I learned recently! One of my questions was, "What did people do before alarm clocks?

I found out that people used some really creative methods. One was putting nails into candles. As the candle burned down, the nail would eventually fall onto a metal tray or another hard surface, making a noise that could wake them up.

There were also people whose actual job was to wake others up. They were called knocker-uppers, and they would tap on windows with long sticks or throw tiny pebbles until the person woke up!

Thousands of years ago, some civilizations used water clocks. As water slowly dripped from one container to another, it eventually raised a float, triggered a lever, or rang a bell.

Church bells, In many towns, people didn't need individual alarms. The local church bells rang: before sunrise, at the start of work, for meals, and at other regular times.
Roosters! Other family members!

Did you know facts:


The plastic tip on the end of a shoelace is called an Aglet!

The little metal band that holds the eraser onto a pencil is called a ferrule.

The little dent in the bottom of many whine bottles is called a "punt"?

The grooves on the edge of a coin are called reeding.

The little metal plate around a keyhole is called an escutcheon.

The dots on dice are called pips.

The dot over the letters i and j has a name. It's called a tittle.

The symbol & is called an ampersand

That little extra pocket inside your front pocket was originally designed for a pocket watch. It's sometimes called a watch pocket.

Did you know the raised bumps on the letters F and J on a keyboard have a purpose?
They're called home row markers. They help you place your fingers correctly without looking.

The @ symbol was used in commerce long before computers. It meant "at the rate of" (like "5 apples @ $1 each").

Did you know the little plastic strip on the edge of a zipper has a name?
It's called a zipper pull when you grab it, and the slider is the part that moves up and down the teeth.

Bananas are berries, but berries aren't?

turtles can breathe through specialized tissues near their rear ends while hibernating underwater, allowing them to survive months beneath ice.

Bodies can make sounds after death as gasses move through the body. These noises have startled people for centuries.
 

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  • Lucy Lucy:
    Man. You know what? Language barriers are frustrating
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    This is becoming a fun rabbit hole....the alphabet has been rearranged a few times. "A" came from a Phoenician symbol that originally represented an ox's head. "B" came from a symbol meaning "house." The names Alpha and Beta evolved from Aleph and Beth. ...
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    The letters J, U, and W are relatively new additions compared to the others. For a long time, people used I/J and U/V as the same letters.
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    I was out today minding my own business at a restaurant when I over heard someone at a table near me say this "The United States is the oldest country in the world." I was thinking...It can't be. At least the "United Kingdom" was around before we came to the new world.
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    Did any of you guys know that the show Anamaniacs once referenced Carmen San Diego in an episode? :D
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  • Jade Jade:
    Yeah, I remember the Acquaintances episode and Yakko ask 'Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego staying?' There was Carmen alright passing by but her face well...look at Animaniacs Wiki Fandom and see for yourself, Lucy.
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    I was today years old when I learned that fire hydrants can be different colors :D
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    Purple: Non-potable or reclaimed water.Blue: Excellent flow (>1,500 gallons per minute).Green: Good flow (1,000 - 1,499 gallons per minute).Orange: Moderate flow (500 - 999 gallons per minute).Red: Limited flow (<500 gallons per minute).Black: Out of service
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    Hey, younger gumshoes! What is the OLDEST city in the U.S.A? It is older than Jamestown! :)
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  • Polly Tix Polly Tix:
    St. Augustine!
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  • Lucy Lucy:
    Hey Polly. Bonus points if you know what state it is in :)
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    Lucy Lucy: Hey Polly. Bonus points if you know what state it is in :)
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