Boncuk
New Member
Clochards make their living on what they get.
One or another even smokes cigarettes made of cigarette ends found in the street. Suitable paper can be found in public restrooms.
It takes three cigarette ends to make one cigarette.
One of those "rouge ordinaire" brothers found two cigarette ends but couldn't make cigarette of them. So asked his companion to lend him a butt.
He rolled a cigarette and smoked it. Thereafter he returned the cigarette end.
Nobody had a loss from that business.
Think about it. It's almost the same as renewable energy formulas.
Another example of arithmetics happened to me while I was in Turkey.
A sales woman gave me a one-dollar note asking me to buy some stuff at the BX.
I asked her for more money since the items totalled to about 8$. She replied: "This is a 10$ note". I asked confused how she got the idea to multiply with 10. She replied again: "Look, it's printed here: One Dollar, but misprinted. It should be "On Dollar".
"On" is the turkish word for "ten".
Boncuk
One or another even smokes cigarettes made of cigarette ends found in the street. Suitable paper can be found in public restrooms.
It takes three cigarette ends to make one cigarette.
One of those "rouge ordinaire" brothers found two cigarette ends but couldn't make cigarette of them. So asked his companion to lend him a butt.
He rolled a cigarette and smoked it. Thereafter he returned the cigarette end.
Nobody had a loss from that business.
Think about it. It's almost the same as renewable energy formulas.
Another example of arithmetics happened to me while I was in Turkey.
A sales woman gave me a one-dollar note asking me to buy some stuff at the BX.
I asked her for more money since the items totalled to about 8$. She replied: "This is a 10$ note". I asked confused how she got the idea to multiply with 10. She replied again: "Look, it's printed here: One Dollar, but misprinted. It should be "On Dollar".
"On" is the turkish word for "ten".
Boncuk