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I realize that it's a bit tacky to drink Glenlivet from a glass labeled "Johnnie Walker" but is it, technically speaking, an actual crime?
A little background here... Last year I got a gift set of Johnnie Walker which came with two very nice glasses. This year I bought meself a gift set of Glenlivet, which was packaged with sample bottles of the 15 year old and the 18 year old, but no glasses. Later I bought my lady another set which had no samplers, but did include two very nice glasses. It turns out now that the set with glasses is only available at a store near her, and the set with samplers is only available at a store near me, and she wants the samplers. So we each bought a set for the other, which we intend to swap this weekend, giving us both nice glasses and samples of the finer versions of this fine concoction. But in the meantime, she's already cracked open my bottle at her house of the 12 year old, yet here I sit, having just put up a bunch of Christmas lights and craving a glass of the good stuff, but lacking a decent glass to pour it in! The Johnnie Walker glass is the best in the house, so to speak, until I can fetch my Glenlivet glasses from her house on Sunday.
Is there hope that I might be forgiven this transgression, under the circumstances? Or can I expect the Scotch police to come knocking in the wee hours and cart me off to some dark nether place where they serve only bourbon?
Will Rogers never met me.
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Roger Wright wrote: I realize that it's a bit tacky to drink Glenlivet from a glass labeled "Johnnie Walker" but is it, technically speaking, an actual crime?
The reverse would be.
i.e. spitting Johnny Walker into a Glenlivet glass.
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Bad, bad, bad.
One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.
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Drink enough that you can no longer read the name on the glass.
Problem solved.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Who gives a rats what is on the glass!
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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It may be a crime to some but a minor misdemeanor at worst.
It would be a worse offense to not drink it at all because of incorrect glasses.
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Just drink it straight from the bottle, and there will be no crime. It comes in it's own glass.
- S
50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
Code, follow, or get out of the way.
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Hi Roger,
Your second paragraph, beginning "A little background here," would make a great opening for a short-story !
If it's crime, at least it's delicious crime ?
yrs, Bill
"We live in a world ruled by fictions: mass merchandising, advertising, politics as advertising, instant translation of science, technology, into popular imagery, increasing blur of identity in realms of consumer goods, preempting any free, original, imaginative, response to experience by the television screen. We live in an enormous novel. For a writer it's less necessary to invent a novel's fictional content: fiction's already there. A writer's task is to invent a reality." J. G. Ballard, 1974
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I would not call it a crime, but it would make me very uneasy if I did this. It's equivalent to labeling a red marker pen as green or blue.
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Its only a crime if you served Johnnie Walker in a Glenlivet glass
You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start
Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.
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