← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Smedley Butler
Thread ID: 11893 | Posts: 23 | Started: 2004-01-14
2004-01-14 08:34 | User Profile
I was listening to Tommy's show and he said that Crispy Creame donut stock went up 43% and they almost doubled their income in one year exceeding the Dual citizen Wall street predictions..I would never eat greasy sugar filled stuff like. They should only be allowed in Congoid areas. Electro Lux, the Expensive Vacuum's that in Consumer's union test report's were no better than HOOVER, moved to MEXICO, hey they have plenty of bed bugs, the savage invaders that they are. Hoover also beat all other Vac's too in test's that compared all makes..
2004-01-14 16:39 | User Profile
There's a Krispy Kreme a few blocks from my house, in all-white suburbia.
Filled to the gills every morning, lotsa fat whites stuffign their fat faces and butts with that trash. Remember, whites like to eat. They think that eating and putting on 275 pounds onto their frame will let them forget about what's happening to their country.
2004-01-14 20:53 | User Profile
[QUOTE=jay]There's a Krispy Kreme a few blocks from my house, in all-white suburbia.
Filled to the gills every morning, lotsa fat whites stuffign their fat faces and butts with that trash. Remember, whites like to eat. They think that eating and putting on 275 pounds onto their frame will let them forget about what's happening to their country.[/QUOTE] It's no doubt akin to some kind of satiation and a stress release for dealing with the upside P.C. country with no sense of being of a group, or living in real community that is theirs alone in peace for working class folks. If you just do not eat junk it will kept you from being obese even when your older with only walking, and no you don't have starve etc., just eat tasty food and fill up, just no junk potato chips etc.. As for oil, Olive, grape seed, Flax, or Almond, but no Canola, soybean, or cotton seed. The Sugar cereal isle in the grocery store blows my mind it on a whole isle on both sides! I amazed that we/the whole country doesn't have diabetes.
2004-01-14 23:42 | User Profile
I find Krispy Kreme very soggy. Then again, I'm a Dunkin Donuts boy.
2004-01-23 19:43 | User Profile
THERE'S ONE AROUND THE CORNER FROM ME IN LILY WHITE bRICK nj.
Their original Krispy Kream is great, IMO. Everyone working there is white.
We have 2 Dunkin Donuts here, both owned and run by brown scum from India and Pakistan.
Pushy bastards. I went in one last week, took a pint of Ice Cream from the freezer, went to the gook at the cash register and she explained in gookish how stupid I was to buy one when there was such a good deal on 2. I repeated in a loud voice "ONE!"
She went for the manager, and I threw it at her and walked out, never to return.
2004-01-23 20:27 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Smedley Butler]I was listening to Tommy's show and he said that Crispy Creame donut stock went up 43% and they almost doubled their income in one year exceeding the Dual citizen Wall street predictions..I would never eat greasy sugar filled stuff like. They should only be allowed in Congoid areas. Electro Lux, the Expensive Vacuum's that in Consumer's union test report's were no better than HOOVER, moved to MEXICO, hey they have plenty of bed bugs, the savage invaders that they are. Hoover also beat all other Vac's too in test's that compared all makes..[/QUOTE]
Krispy Kreme went public a couple years back and took off. Apparently it has some yuppie cachet, but we've had it down here for years. It's another suddenly hip brand. Some folks salivate when they see the Hot Donuts Now sign light up, but it's mostly the obese NFL couch rangers and the welfare blacks that regularly patronize the places in the South.
Last year while in San Francisco it was funny/pathetic to see all the effete snobs rushing the new Krispy Kreme. Seems like all bets are off once the right homosexuals approve of a trend; Dunkin Donuts was started by urban Jews while KK has a distinct southern makeup. Just like with bluegrass, the fey NY/SoCal arbiters of cultural approval will move on to the next fad soon enough, and KK will be relegated back to the junk food status it deserves.
The interesting point is how overblown a stock can become based on pop culture buzz for the most part, instead of long-term potential.
2004-01-23 21:55 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Smedley Butler]It's no doubt akin to some kind of satiation and a stress release for dealing with the upside P.C. country with no sense of being of a group, or living in real community that is theirs alone in peace for working class folks.[/QUOTE]
I think there's definitely something true in your diagnosis of American overeating. Our culture and lifestyles have been so degraded through decades of jewsmedia propaganda that the people's only solace from the insanity of living under jewish domination is FOOOOOOD. And there's no limit to food....going out to eat is all I hear people talk about these days. Oh, this new restaurant, and this place is great, and this place is hip, and this place is inexpensive, blah, blah, blah. Well, it's all there is to do anyway. Go to a bar with friends and get arrested for driving while "intoxicated"(2 beers)?? Yea, right! Oh well, no more friends, but darnit, I gots Burger King!! Take a walk after dinner and get mugged by blacks? Talk a walk anywhere? Does anyone walk? Ahhhh, Eat and watch tv or go to the movies. Bread and circuses. McDonalds and NFL. Burgers and MTV. KRISPY CREMES & ROMANS!!!
2004-01-23 22:06 | User Profile
Well, I'm currently doing the low-carb thing, but I think Krispy Kremes are pretty dang good. Only surpassed by the local Shipleys.
Some of y'all sound worse than an old blue-haired, fundie Calvinist walkin' past the local beer joint. :whlch: :furious:
2004-01-23 22:21 | User Profile
[QUOTE]Krispy Kreme went public a couple years back and took off. Apparently it has some yuppie cachet...[/QUOTE]
Agreed. It's analogous to Starbucks. One day you've never heard of the thing, the next day everybody's bringing it up - and the day after [I]that [/I] you start meeting people who lie and loudly insist they've been mad about them for years.
Once you hit that Stage Three, the day of the five dollar donut isn't far away. The way the three-dollar cup of coffee is now here. Yes...[U]coffee and a donut are now status symbols[/U]. Who [I]says [/I] we're not in the middle of a New Depression?
2004-01-23 22:29 | User Profile
At least donut is food to some. How one justifies paying $3 for a coffee is beyond me. I'd be interested in a psychological profile of regular Starbucks customers.
2004-01-24 03:09 | User Profile
[QUOTE=madrussian]At least donut is food to some. How one justifies paying $3 for a coffee is beyond me. I'd be interested in a psychological profile of regular Starbucks customers.[/QUOTE]
Ha! What's even worse is that Folgers came out with an iced coffee to compete with Starbucks. The Folgers actually costs MORE than Starbucks.
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2004-01-24 18:37 | User Profile
[QUOTE=madrussian]At least donut is food to some. How one justifies paying $3 for a coffee is beyond me. I'd be interested in a psychological profile of regular Starbucks customers.[/QUOTE]
Mad, I don't think there's anything wrong with their "psyche" They simply like the product.
I mean, when I see soccer moms demanding $40K SUV's to tote their one kid around in, I think that's far more egregious. Or 300K homes, in suburbia, put up in a week. Far bigger wastes, IMO.
-Jay
2004-01-24 18:46 | User Profile
When Krispy Kreme came to my town about a year ago, it created more buzz than any eating place ever has, even though we already had a number of donut shops. I've never been there, but I have had a number of donuts from there. I don't see what's so special.
I don't know if Krispy Kreme is a master of Public Relations or if they just are lucky in becoming the "cool" donut shop in minds of the fickle public.
2004-01-24 23:33 | User Profile
More on Dunkin' Donuts--
Many years ago, Dunkin' Donuts was a rather large-sized franchise, maybe a little smaller than a Burger King. It seems that they did what some other establishments did: downsize while populating themselves all over the place. Supermarkets, gas stations now have little DD shops within them. Same with Baskin Robbins. It's as if these franchises no longer stand by themselves; they merge with other companies but the names and eateries remain the same. A convenience store near me added a Subway inside of it.
2004-01-25 00:12 | User Profile
"How one justifies paying $3 for a coffee is beyond me. I'd be interested in a psychological profile of regular Starbucks customers."
It comes from being a person, such as myself, who doesn't really like coffee. I greatly enjoy a "venti vanilla/coconut latte with double espresso," which is more like hot ice cream that gets you slightly high. A cuppa joe, on the other hand, tastes like the hot bean soup that it is. Not that I go to Starbuck's very often, as I'm poor, but I'd rather a $3 beverage I enjoy than an 89 cent one I don't....
2004-01-25 00:15 | User Profile
"I've never been there, but I have had a number of donuts from there. I don't see what's so special."
They are too sweet (for donuts, I mean) and they only have like five different varieties. They are the very worst donut place I am personally aware of. Their popularity is weird.
2004-01-25 18:48 | User Profile
[QUOTE=jay]Mad, I don't think there's anything wrong with their "psyche" They simply like the product.
I mean, when I see soccer moms demanding $40K SUV's to tote their one kid around in, I think that's far more egregious. Or 300K homes, in suburbia, put up in a week. Far bigger wastes, IMO.
-Jay[/QUOTE]
When the price of coffee approaches the price of lunch, there is something wrong. OK, there is a minority that are so hooked that they can't live without it (still there are alternative more economical ways to get your coffee), there is a minority also for whom $3 just doesn't matter in their budget. But what about the rest?
2004-01-27 04:53 | User Profile
[QUOTE]It comes from being a person, such as myself, who doesn't really like coffee. I greatly enjoy a "venti vanilla/coconut latte with double espresso," which is more like hot ice cream that gets you slightly high. A cuppa joe, on the other hand, tastes like the hot bean soup that it is. Not that I go to Starbuck's very often, as I'm poor, but I'd rather a $3 beverage I enjoy than an 89 cent one I don't.... [/QUOTE] Speaking as a coffee [I]afficienda[/I], but one with more sense than money -- y'all can have a LOVELY 'flavoured coffee' by buying either flavoured beans and/or flavouring syrups. My morning coffee USED to be a wonderful Chocolate Mint from the supermarket (then they quit making those beans; now I mix the new delicious Chocolate Velvet coffee beans with their Christmas peppermint coffee beans (Jingle Mint or some silly name...). I also use DaVinci's (no-carb Tex Diss -- so you know) Cookie Dough syrup in coffee YUM! ([url]www.davincigourmet.com[/url])
But yeah, I call it dessert coffee!
2004-01-27 06:58 | User Profile
I like my coffee just like my women...hot and black.
:afro:
Straight from Louisiana - Community Coffee Dark Roast. There is no substitute. :thumbsup:
2004-01-27 07:02 | User Profile
QUOTE=Avalanche[/QUOTE]
Hey! Speaking of low/no carb stuff, have you seen or tried Breyer's low-carb ice cream, regular and klondike bar style made with Splenda? Oh man. What a God-send for those of us with a nightly sweet tooth that goes with our evening cup of coffee.
2004-01-29 00:46 | User Profile
Raw eggs with milk, and good amounts of creatine, blended together and taken morning-noon-and-night. Every day. That is my 'coffee'.
Stay clear of refined sugar products. In my opinion - it dims the brain and weakens the muscles.
2004-02-12 11:18 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Texas Dissident]I like my coffee just like my women...hot and black.
:afro:
[/QUOTE]
Ummm.. Ew?
:)
A
2004-02-12 11:20 | User Profile
The coffee my wife and I drink here is called "Tschibo Feine Milde". Europeans don't roast all the oils out of the beans before they grind it. Makes for a better coffee, when you can see pools of oil floating on top of it.
Ausonius