[GCFL-discuss] Energy Levels
gcfl-discuss at gcfl.net
gcfl-discuss at gcfl.net
Sat Jun 26 23:10:48 CDT 2004
Ok I know this may not interest some of you but...... I
thought I'd ask those of you who know about Playstation & playstation 2.
I recently got a Playstation 1 at a yard Sale for 15.00 I think I got a
good deal but don't know a lot about that sort of thing. I was in at
this game store & traded in some of the games that came with it ( the
most they gave me for a used game was 1.00 & that was a 5 disc set ! )
but anyway they told me they buy Playstation 1's for 10.00 to resell
them. I am thinking I may have gotton a deal because they resell the
games I sold them for 5- 15.00 so if they are doing that with the games
they're sure to sell Playstation 1 for at least 25- 30. right? Hope I am
not boring all of you & no I do not sit around & play video games all
the time ! I live on a farmette with lots of grass to mow & then there's
my job..... JUST DIDN'T WANT YOU ALL TO GET THE WRONG IDEA :)
So does anyone know about Play stations?
Jeff
On Thu, 24 Jun 2004 22:50:01 -0500 gcfl-discuss at gcfl.net writes:
> Ever since someone started complaining about the appearance of
> animosity
> in our discussions, exchange of any thoughts at all has fallen to
> near
> zero. Could we each contribute something in the next three days that
> is
>
> a) provocative and interesting enough to generate a round of
> comments,
>
> and
>
> b) not of a nature to leave us all feeling mortally offended?
>
> I have two modest contributions to offer.
>
> 1) I really enjoyed the list of "Literary Insults" that recently
> came out
> from GCFL. I liked Lincoln, Reed, Reston and Twain the best.
>
> 2) I am reading a book called People of the Lake by Richard E.
> Leakey and
> Roger Lewin, about the beginnings of humankind. One of the most
> fascinating conclusions so far is that early human existence was
> anything
> BUT the "nasty, brutish and short" life that 19th century
> Victorians
> attributed to it. For one thing, hunting contributed only about 20%
> of
> the human diet, complex social organization existed, including
> probably
> families. (Many primates live in bands, but only humans live in
> family
> groups within bands. In fact, it seems that gatherer-hunter
> societies
> remaining, almost anywhere in the world, exist in tribal groupings
> of
> about 500, because that is the number within which new adults can
> find
> mates without resorting to incest, starting new families.) Finally,
> people generally could supply all their needs in about three hours
> work a
> day, even in desert environments -- not the image of working from
> dawn
> till dusk to scratch out a meagre survival.
>
> Siarlys
>
>
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