tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30802444.post6760276213254545681..comments2023-06-16T09:13:46.330-05:00Comments on gabbygeezer: Dick Kladehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11793395712483278104noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30802444.post-11709589116981949982010-10-04T06:19:26.186-05:002010-10-04T06:19:26.186-05:00Interesting, joared. Somehow the fact that tea al...Interesting, joared. Somehow the fact that tea also is a no-no zipped right past me. However, with the affinity of Utahans for Tea Party rhetoric, I sense the prophet may feel a revelation coming on.<br /><br />Your Pepsi recollection was close. It was Coke. The revelation that it was OK to guzzle the previously banned soft drink came shortly after the Mormon Church bought a large block of stock in the Cola Cola Company. Pepsi apparently automatically went on the approved list also, so it was an equal opportunity revelation.<br /><br />Such is the nature of revelations. We mere mortals never know when, or why, they will appear.Dick Kladehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11793395712483278104noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30802444.post-24878121887244188802010-10-04T05:11:15.485-05:002010-10-04T05:11:15.485-05:00Enjoyed your humorous take on the latest significa...Enjoyed your humorous take on the latest significant political concerns.<br /><br />The erstwhile Coffee Party and the Cocktail Party must surely be subject to rejection, based solely on their names, before anyone would even consider attending their meetings. Only the brave would go to discover that, as often is the political case, there is little connection between words and their literal meaning. Is it not likely the same would be true for the Tea Party, or is that beverage now tolerated? I wonder what beverage that Party serves? Seems to me there never used to be a Pepsi Crowd there either, but believe that changed when financial investment was made in the company.joaredhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09999395062839739698noreply@blogger.com