Even back then, 'merkin 'merkins were just paltry imitations of proper English 'merkins....Clinton Huxley wrote:It was much more difficult to make Merkins you'd never met cross, in the 70s.......

Even back then, 'merkin 'merkins were just paltry imitations of proper English 'merkins....Clinton Huxley wrote:It was much more difficult to make Merkins you'd never met cross, in the 70s.......
I just want people to be able to do some basic cipherin' so that I don't have to look at them like they are complete and utter imbeciles. I prefer to think well of my fellow citizens, and they make it so difficult sometimes...Clinton Huxley wrote:You know, I do have a remarkably thick and rather distinguished head of hair, my barber comments on it everytime I go.
Anyway, we don't need to count or do sums, we have machines for that.
In the land of the numerical dunce, the man who can do long division is King....Coito ergo sum wrote:I just want people to be able to do some basic cipherin' so that I don't have to look at them like they are complete and utter imbeciles. I prefer to think well of my fellow citizens, and they make it so difficult sometimes...Clinton Huxley wrote:You know, I do have a remarkably thick and rather distinguished head of hair, my barber comments on it everytime I go.
Anyway, we don't need to count or do sums, we have machines for that.
Give that chap a job at a credit rating agency immediately.Coito ergo sum wrote:Did you ever go to the cash register and the bill is like $1.18 (or Brit-money equivalent) -- all you have is a $20 bill, and some change, so you hand the person $20.18, only to have them look confusedly at the bill and the change, back and forth, attempting to puzzle out just what it is they're being asked to do...?
Hardly going to be an issue in 20 in fact 10 years, cash is getting rarer and rarer all the time now. I should really try and work out what % of my expenses are paid for via cash can't more than 10% or so these daysCoito ergo sum wrote:Did you ever go to the cash register and the bill is like $1.18 (or Brit-money equivalent) -- all you have is a $20 bill, and some change, so you hand the person $20.18, only to have them look confusedly at the bill and the change, back and forth, attempting to puzzle out just what it is they're being asked to do...?
That doesn't mean the underlying problem goes away.MrJonno wrote:Hardly going to be an issue in 20 in fact 10 years, cash is getting rarer and rarer all the time now. I should really try and work out what % of my expenses are paid for via cash can't more than 10% or so these daysCoito ergo sum wrote:Did you ever go to the cash register and the bill is like $1.18 (or Brit-money equivalent) -- all you have is a $20 bill, and some change, so you hand the person $20.18, only to have them look confusedly at the bill and the change, back and forth, attempting to puzzle out just what it is they're being asked to do...?
Having bad handwriting is not the same as being illiterate. Being innumerate is like being illiterate. It's being uneducated and appearing to be stupid. It's indicative of a reduced cognitive functioning, whereas sloppy handwriting is not.MrJonno wrote:Is having bad hand writing really a problem these days with this new fangled computer things, sure its exists but isnt a bit like moaning about goat herding skills not being what they were.
Some of this could be remedied by a healthy stigma being applied to people who don't value learning.MrJonno wrote:Fair point, I just long ago accepted a high % of the population are extremely thick and base most my politics on that
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