Spyke
lemmy.nz

I'll take "What's classy when you're rich but not when you're poor?" for $100 Alex

92

Given the monarchy is the top class in a class system then yes: by definition.

8
PugJesusreply
lemmy.world

Well, the princess is downing a bottle of fortified wine, so it would seem that's just par for the course.

58
lemmy.world

When I was 14, my parents ordered a bottle of wine in a restaurant and asked, if I wanted a glass. Nobody thought twice about it.

7

In 1955, basically everyone smoked. Like 65% of Europe were smokers, and I do mean 65% of living humans of all ages.

33
cazssiewreply
lemmy.world

I was smoking at 12 in France in 1999, I told tobacconists I was buying them for my mom. Pulled the same thing off in the states when I moved there 2 years later. And I was far from alone. These are far more recent (terrible, obviously) habits than you might think.

26

Started smoking at 12 too, also in the 90s. Quit in high-school.

6
lemmy.ca

My dad was smoking at 6.

Rural Canada, 75 years ago. Still alive.

3

Cancer is nothing you can count on. For the bad and for the good.
Hope your dad stays healthy.

5

Yah, my uncle lived to 94, smoked for 89 of those years. Pretty sure if we'd had a nuclear war in the 60s, that fucker would have still made it into his 80s.

1
kbin.earth

Amateurs. I started my cocaine addiction at 5 years old when the Fleetwood Mac album Rumours came out.

Edit: again I need to learn doing correct grammar in English.

17
sh.itjust.works

again I need to learn doing correct grammar in English.

It's pretty decent for someone nearing a half century coke habit.

30

I think those might actually be frosted glass cups.

Here is the best copy I could find, and the flared edges do not look like plastic cups - also the shiny inside and matte outside looks more like glass frosted on the outside.

PP was not in commercial use until 1957 (not sure when it was first used for cups), PET disposable cups weren't a thing until the 70s. Disposable cups in the 50s would have been wax paper.

11
jlai.lu

How can you still be prince from a county that has ceased to exist for centuries?

7
Agent641reply
lemmy.world

I read this as a non-rhetorical question, in a Nigerian accent

2

Me too, especially due to the use of the word 'ceased'. Reminded me of this video where a reverse scammer convinced the Nigerian scammers to record Monty python's dead parrot sketch, as he combines then he could get them a BBC grant.

https://youtu.be/awtAKa22AVk

2

Fun fact because I've lived in that region for a while: Count Alexander zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn ist still alive and inherited the family's castle, which he successfully renovated. It had been a ruin after WW2. He also has a Harvard Business degree. The castle is an event location now and one of very few castles in Germany that are still owned by the original aristocratic family. There is also a butterfly house next to the castles.

2
PugJesusreply
lemmy.world

I think even Euronobility stopped the practice of marrying their kids off THAT young a few centuries before.

3

In Germany usually the wedding ring is on the right hand not on the left.

5
nillocreply
discuss.tchncs.de

Colorizing with photoshop perhaps?

Or maybe it’s the genetic family wreaths of nobility showing?

1

You reached the end