I didn't know that, so I'll have to see the movie. Thank youDid you watch that Sandra Bullock movie. . . Heat? With Melissa McCarthy in it. There is a line in there about using coffee filters as toilet paper.
I didn't know that, so I'll have to see the movie. Thank youDid you watch that Sandra Bullock movie. . . Heat? With Melissa McCarthy in it. There is a line in there about using coffee filters as toilet paper.
Just so happened I was flipping channels to go to sleep to and that particular scene was on. I may have the name wrong but definitely those two actresses are in it.I didn't know that, so I'll have to see the movie. Thank you
Thank you.Not a bad idea, but for about $60 you can buy 50 pounds of cotton shop rags/sheeting from Home Depot. Throw them away or soak and reuse, if it got that bad.
I know. The idea makes me cringe.One of the nastiest tidbits I learned about history was the romans using a communal sponge over and over. I get that they didn’t know about bacteria and viruses but that’s just nasty!
We aren’t so smart considering we’re supposed to be the smartest animal on the planet are we?I know. The idea makes me cringe.
You do, however, suggest an interesting point.
The Romans didn't understand bacteriology, so they can--perhaps--be excused for this.
I think our descendants will say very similar things about us and have a similar attitude about us destroying the environmental, climate change, dumping chemical **** in the water supply . . . and the difference between us and the Romans (in your example) is that we know it's unhealthy and disgusting, and we do it anyway.