One of the rare occasions where Frazz’s premise is wrong. Julian Calendar, 46 CE. Coffee in Ethiopia, 1100 CE. Weekends had about a 1000 year head start.
For Caulfield, adult conversations are a seminar in ways to flummox adults. Like any normal pair of adolescent ears, he will collect everything he hears, then let it out at the most opportune moments.
The really scary thing is the implication that while she can’t handle Mondays before her first cup of coffee… she can handle driving to the coffee shop to get it.
If I read my outside-the-mainstream history right, coffee isn’t the only pharmaceutical breakfast beverage to precede the invention of the weekend. There was much resistance to coffee in Britain for fear of the economic impact of replacing beer as the official greet-the-day cuppa.
That sounds so odd, beer for breakfast, until you remember that good, reliable, available, drinkable water is a fairly recent thing in human history (and looking more and more like a blip). And without the weekend, there was less incentive to drink it Friday evenings.
I wonder if coffee or beer preceded or followed the tendency to pointlessly argue and to cheat for advantage in those pointless arguments. Because I sure sense an association.
If you are asking to get information, and the answer doesn’t give you the information you are looking for, adjusting the question may be the right thing to do.
Masterskrain about 6 years ago
Coffee= Burnt Bean Juice. YUCK!!!
Jeff0811 about 6 years ago
One of the rare occasions where Frazz’s premise is wrong. Julian Calendar, 46 CE. Coffee in Ethiopia, 1100 CE. Weekends had about a 1000 year head start.
So what are you doing this weekend?
I’m going to kill Ceaser
Et tu Brute?
sandpiper about 6 years ago
For Caulfield, adult conversations are a seminar in ways to flummox adults. Like any normal pair of adolescent ears, he will collect everything he hears, then let it out at the most opportune moments.
garcoa about 6 years ago
How did people manage any morning before coffee? That is the real question (for me, anyhow).
jel354 about 6 years ago
Better than solving the wrong problem.
maxiesmom2 Premium Member about 6 years ago
And just what did Mrs. Olsen do on her weekend that she is needing to recover from?? Rough night at bingo?
Smokie about 6 years ago
Coffee-the elixir of life!! (and then there is Pumpkin Spice!!)
raptor about 6 years ago
Drink Coffee – Do Stupid Things Faster with More Energy
WCraft Premium Member about 6 years ago
You listening, NIght-Gaunt?
Al Nala about 6 years ago
Ya had to bring yer own from home! In a Thermos!! Which saved you MONEY. Unless you forgot to take it home at night.
kunddog about 6 years ago
They drank tea…
magicwalnut about 6 years ago
M y daughter drinks about twelve cups a day, then lies in bed with her coloring books until bedtime and complains she can’t sleep.
PoodleGroomer about 6 years ago
They would remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy, get started on Sunday, and be ready Monday.
SpammersAreScum about 6 years ago
Otherwise known as “moving the goalposts”.
rlaker22j about 6 years ago
Caffeine, nicotine and gasoline the ingredients for life
LrdSlvrhnd about 6 years ago
The really scary thing is the implication that while she can’t handle Mondays before her first cup of coffee… she can handle driving to the coffee shop to get it.
Stephen Gilberg about 6 years ago
Well, Frazz is no Genesis literalist.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 6 years ago
Frazz17 hrs ·
If I read my outside-the-mainstream history right, coffee isn’t the only pharmaceutical breakfast beverage to precede the invention of the weekend. There was much resistance to coffee in Britain for fear of the economic impact of replacing beer as the official greet-the-day cuppa.
That sounds so odd, beer for breakfast, until you remember that good, reliable, available, drinkable water is a fairly recent thing in human history (and looking more and more like a blip). And without the weekend, there was less incentive to drink it Friday evenings.
I wonder if coffee or beer preceded or followed the tendency to pointlessly argue and to cheat for advantage in those pointless arguments. Because I sure sense an association.
DonLee2 about 6 years ago
Needlessly unpleasant and pedantic in the second panel, Frazz.
FrankTAW about 1 year ago
If you are asking to get information, and the answer doesn’t give you the information you are looking for, adjusting the question may be the right thing to do.