This is a blog devoted to the comic strip "Pluggers", about the "80 percent of humanity who unceremoniously keep plugging along -- balancing work, play and family life." This strip is also described as "America’s first interactive, reader-participation comic."
That sounds like most of us, right? And our fellow Americans are sending in the ideas. So let's see how it matches up with reality, shall we?
Just to show we're not always on the cynic's page, I think the Pluggers would agree with us that the people who bought girl scout cookies in Bremerton, WA, with counterfeit $20 bills were not good people.
Ten boxes of Thin Mints?!?! My GOD. I have trouble finishing ONE.
ReplyDeleteYou can freeze them and they last awhile, but not that long.
ReplyDeleteAnd ten boxes still take time to get through. More than a year.
My mom loves Thin Mints and she never bought that much.
Hell, when we were Girl Scouts, we could only depend on her for a couple boxes. Those things were expensive and now they cost even more!
10 boxes takes a year to get through? you don't have much of an appetite. I could finish an entire girl scout in less than a week.
ReplyDeleteJust to show we're not always on the cynic's page, I think the Pluggers would agree with us that the people who bought girl scout cookies in Bremerton, WA, with counterfeit $20 bills were not good people.
ReplyDeletethis isn't much of a joke . . surprisingly I expect more from Pluggers
ReplyDeleteGrandma's out about $60 so far.
ReplyDeletewv: alizedag an ancient holiday wherein elderly and feeble Swedish Pluggers who could no longer work were put down with a cloth-covered cattle maul.
I bought three boxes of thin mints from a girl scout and I'm planning to eat them all while watching Lifetime/ or crying in the shower.
ReplyDelete