I had a morning dream about Australian nickles [don’t ask, it was really stupid]. So I opened the wiki to learn about their currency, and found out that their folding money was polyester not paper and that the different denominations were of different lengths [same width].
Scientists can turn nearly anything organic (carbon based) into diamonds because of the high volume of carbon. Now, turning diamonds into peanut butter would be a trick!
How big of a diamond can I get if a scientist turns one BJ’s-sized container of PB into a diamond? Just want to know if it’s worth it. Because I would take it turn around and hawk it. But I’ve also heard the human body also contains a very small amount of gold. But hardly enough to cash in on. You’d have to dig up a lot of graves to get enough to be worth it. So if you have to buy 500 containers of PB just to get half a carat, that’s definitely no good.
I’d like a dliamond and jelly sandwich please. Heh heh… yes I’m serious.. HEY.. PUT DOWN THAT ROLLING PIN.. AAARRRGGGHH…
Take care, may rampant machine Thokketah-Thokketah “We Can Only Do What You Tell Us To Do And You Don’t Always Know What You’re Telling Us To Do” Screechord be with you, and gesundheit.
I used to get $2 bills from the bank when I’d get cash out and use them, but I eventually stopped because it was just too much of a hassle getting cashiers to take them at some stores. One objection they’d have was that there was no designated place for $2 bills in their cash drawer.
Harvey Dent has cornered the market on$2.00 bills.
No fair butting in on Superman’s specialty of squeezing coal into diamonds.
Harpo Marx wrote in his memoirs that when he visited Russia in 1933,a poker game came to a halt because Russian Rubles were so paper-thin that they literally wore out after being passed around the table several times.
I really wish (due to inflation and common sense) they would infuse those $2 bills into circulation. Maybe stop printing dollar bills for about six months and replace them with the two dollar bills. I think it would really help everyone.
There is a man in Dickinson ND named Bill. He gives random children $2 bills. They call him Two Dollar Bill. He has quite a reputation. If your name is Bill, you have a chance to bless and teach the young of our society with this opportunity.
There’s a peanut on an airplane, and he’s chatting it up with a flight attendant. This peanut’s name is Dillon. They’re having a very intimate conversation about where they’re from and where they are in life right now. Dillon is in the middle of explaining his ethnic background when the flight attendant interrupts him and says ‘No problem Dillon we can make that happen for you’ she starts walking towards the front of the plane and motions for him to follow here.
She leads him to an open seat and asks him if this will work any better. Beyond confused, Dillon accepts his new seat as it’s a lot more spacious but asks the flight attendant why she moved him. “You were talking awfully quietly but you were complaining about your leg room.”
“No” says Dillon, I was explaining that I was a legume”.
How did William Bullock die? The following is from Wikipedia:
In a bizarre accident, Bullock was killed by his own invention. On April 3, 1867 he was making adjustments to one of his new presses that was being installed for the Philadelphia Public Ledger newspaper. Bullock tried to kick a driving belt onto a pulley. His leg was crushed when it became caught in the machine. After a few days, he developed gangrene. On April 12, 1867, Bullock died during an operation to amputate the leg. He is buried in Union Dale Cemetery on Pittsburgh’s North Side.
This is one of the few times all three facts have surprised me. I’d been surprised enough to learn that U.S. dollar coins are still being made when I haven’t seen one in more than 20 years.
there have been a lot of people killed by their own inventions. There is a Wikipedia page dedicated to them. https://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_inventors_killed_by_their_own_inventions
Before Canada changed to $2 coins the bills were not prevalent in my province because of a rumour going around. During the depression politicians would bribe voters with a $2 bill or people would pay prostitutes with the bill. So if you had a $2 bill it made you look bad. Not sure if this was true, but it’s what I heard growing up.
If I could time travel (in both directions) I’d go to 1952 Vegas ( or just a local bank) and buy up as many silver dollars as I could carry (They were EVERYWHERE in Vegas back then). Come back and sell them at a profit, then repeat the operation. I’d use singles (Federal Reserve Notes) and trade them for Silver Certificates at a time when both were widely circulated), so the differences in the bills would not show up.
Or buy gold when it was $100 an ounce.
Or I could just develop the power of psychokinesis, lay $1000 on a number at the Roulette table then ‘psyckokinese’ the little ball to land on that number. Bingo—$35,000 before taxes. Now I wonder if those pit bosses behind the casino ceiling have their own psychics as a precaution.
We use $2 bills all the time in my family. We love them!! And sometimes people act like we have counterfeit money. hahaha!! They’ve never heard of or seen a $2 bill before. Cracks us up!
rimose over 2 years ago
You can make a diamond from peanut butter but can you play a phonograph album with a peanut.
Dean over 2 years ago
I had a morning dream about Australian nickles [don’t ask, it was really stupid]. So I opened the wiki to learn about their currency, and found out that their folding money was polyester not paper and that the different denominations were of different lengths [same width].
John Wiley Premium Member over 2 years ago
Scientists can turn nearly anything organic (carbon based) into diamonds because of the high volume of carbon. Now, turning diamonds into peanut butter would be a trick!
bookworm0812 over 2 years ago
How big of a diamond can I get if a scientist turns one BJ’s-sized container of PB into a diamond? Just want to know if it’s worth it. Because I would take it turn around and hawk it. But I’ve also heard the human body also contains a very small amount of gold. But hardly enough to cash in on. You’d have to dig up a lot of graves to get enough to be worth it. So if you have to buy 500 containers of PB just to get half a carat, that’s definitely no good.
chaosed2 over 2 years ago
$1 coins and $2 bills are great revenge on annoying cashiers
James Wolfenstein over 2 years ago
“Scientists…”
Huckleberry Hiroshima over 2 years ago
I’d like a dliamond and jelly sandwich please. Heh heh… yes I’m serious.. HEY.. PUT DOWN THAT ROLLING PIN.. AAARRRGGGHH…
Take care, may rampant machine Thokketah-Thokketah “We Can Only Do What You Tell Us To Do And You Don’t Always Know What You’re Telling Us To Do” Screechord be with you, and gesundheit.
scpandich over 2 years ago
I used to get $2 bills from the bank when I’d get cash out and use them, but I eventually stopped because it was just too much of a hassle getting cashiers to take them at some stores. One objection they’d have was that there was no designated place for $2 bills in their cash drawer.
artegal over 2 years ago
Peanut butter is a girl’s best friend!
notjimothy over 2 years ago
$2 bill, Race track money.
Teto85 Premium Member over 2 years ago
$1 and $2 coins in Canada. Costs too much to use paper.
198.23.5.11 over 2 years ago
Harvey Dent has cornered the market on$2.00 bills.
No fair butting in on Superman’s specialty of squeezing coal into diamonds.
Harpo Marx wrote in his memoirs that when he visited Russia in 1933,a poker game came to a halt because Russian Rubles were so paper-thin that they literally wore out after being passed around the table several times.
MuddyUSA Premium Member over 2 years ago
How did William Bullock get killed by the web rotary press?
e.groves over 2 years ago
I have a silver certificate one-dollar bill. It was in some change years ago. I think it’s from 1957.
dv1093 over 2 years ago
I really wish (due to inflation and common sense) they would infuse those $2 bills into circulation. Maybe stop printing dollar bills for about six months and replace them with the two dollar bills. I think it would really help everyone.
Marcia Gibson Premium Member over 2 years ago
There is a man in Dickinson ND named Bill. He gives random children $2 bills. They call him Two Dollar Bill. He has quite a reputation. If your name is Bill, you have a chance to bless and teach the young of our society with this opportunity.
oakie817 over 2 years ago
bullock very ironic name….see UK
FassEddie over 2 years ago
Just like Doctor Frankenstein.
paranormal over 2 years ago
So, one day we’ll see Jiffy Peanut Butter Diamonds???
Charlie Fogwhistle over 2 years ago
Peanut butter joke supply is quite thin, and of those, over half are based on Pb being the chemical symbol for Lead.
But here’s a simple little ditty about peanuts.
A guy walks into a bar, and orders a round. He hears a small voice say..“You look nice today.”
A few minutes later, it’s that voice again, “That’s a nice shirt.”
The guy asks the bartender, “Who is that?”
Says the bartender, “It’s the peanuts. They’re complimentary!”
Charlie Fogwhistle over 2 years ago
One more.
There’s a peanut on an airplane, and he’s chatting it up with a flight attendant. This peanut’s name is Dillon. They’re having a very intimate conversation about where they’re from and where they are in life right now. Dillon is in the middle of explaining his ethnic background when the flight attendant interrupts him and says ‘No problem Dillon we can make that happen for you’ she starts walking towards the front of the plane and motions for him to follow here.
She leads him to an open seat and asks him if this will work any better. Beyond confused, Dillon accepts his new seat as it’s a lot more spacious but asks the flight attendant why she moved him. “You were talking awfully quietly but you were complaining about your leg room.”
“No” says Dillon, I was explaining that I was a legume”.
Until next time.
ars731 over 2 years ago
I want to know more about how the printing press killed its inventor
Buckeye67 over 2 years ago
Up till now I have never heard a peanut joke, maybe they never caught on. I can’t imagine why.
Charlie Fogwhistle over 2 years ago
How did William Bullock die? The following is from Wikipedia:
In a bizarre accident, Bullock was killed by his own invention. On April 3, 1867 he was making adjustments to one of his new presses that was being installed for the Philadelphia Public Ledger newspaper. Bullock tried to kick a driving belt onto a pulley. His leg was crushed when it became caught in the machine. After a few days, he developed gangrene. On April 12, 1867, Bullock died during an operation to amputate the leg. He is buried in Union Dale Cemetery on Pittsburgh’s North Side.
Stephen Gilberg over 2 years ago
This is one of the few times all three facts have surprised me. I’d been surprised enough to learn that U.S. dollar coins are still being made when I haven’t seen one in more than 20 years.
MY DOG IS MY CO PILOT over 2 years ago
there have been a lot of people killed by their own inventions. There is a Wikipedia page dedicated to them. https://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_inventors_killed_by_their_own_inventions
General_Ledger over 2 years ago
Before Canada changed to $2 coins the bills were not prevalent in my province because of a rumour going around. During the depression politicians would bribe voters with a $2 bill or people would pay prostitutes with the bill. So if you had a $2 bill it made you look bad. Not sure if this was true, but it’s what I heard growing up.
spaced man spliff over 2 years ago
If I could time travel (in both directions) I’d go to 1952 Vegas ( or just a local bank) and buy up as many silver dollars as I could carry (They were EVERYWHERE in Vegas back then). Come back and sell them at a profit, then repeat the operation. I’d use singles (Federal Reserve Notes) and trade them for Silver Certificates at a time when both were widely circulated), so the differences in the bills would not show up.
Or buy gold when it was $100 an ounce.
Or I could just develop the power of psychokinesis, lay $1000 on a number at the Roulette table then ‘psyckokinese’ the little ball to land on that number. Bingo—$35,000 before taxes. Now I wonder if those pit bosses behind the casino ceiling have their own psychics as a precaution.
Camiyami Premium Member over 2 years ago
We use $2 bills all the time in my family. We love them!! And sometimes people act like we have counterfeit money. hahaha!! They’ve never heard of or seen a $2 bill before. Cracks us up!