Showing posts with label rooster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rooster. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Oct 3 2023 - Dignity

 

Today's topic is dignity.  I wonder what the current state of dignity is. What did it used to be? The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy says that it is a complex concept.  In academic and legal contexts it is used in the phrase "human dignity". The basic worth or status that belongs to all persons equally. It is considered a defining ideal of our contemporary world, for those of us in the West. 

In the past it was associated with rank, station, honour, uniqueness, beauty, poise, gravitas, integrity, self-respect, self-esteem, a sacred place in the order of things, supreme worth.  That's a lot of things packed in there. 

The article goes on to ask whether it is a moral concept or a political and legal one? And then this is an American viewpoint, so do we Canadians think similarly or differently.  The phrase "dignity 2023" retrieves "Dignity status" in the U.S. granting undocumented people legal status.  

We in Canada associate dignity with dying as in "dying with dignity" and medical assistance in dying.  Quite different viewpoints revealed here. But both are dealing with key milestone points in human living.

Dignity isn't used broadly even though some are bold enough to use it.  There's Dressing with Dignity by Colleen Hammon - how to protect yourself and your loved ones from the onslaught of tasteless, immodest, clothing.  What about eating with dignity?  This is aimed at people when they are unwell and need to replace essential nutrients and calories.  And dignity in communication and conversations:  this is about dealing with Alzheimer's Disease and the gradual diminishing of a person's ability to communicate.  All of these seem sombre and serious.  

So, turn the page...to find a suitable joke:

Why did the chicken cross the road?

Because it had crippling depression, it was constantly reminded that it's life was worthless to those it was looked down on by. A mere piece of meat, not a living creature, worthy of respect, and dignity. It didn't want to live in a constant state of fear and depression, knowing that it's only purpose in life would be death. So it escaped the farm, and took off to the highway... it saw the lights, and though the creature feared death, it was relieved to be free from the fear that plagued it.

So in short... to get to the other side.

 

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Wednesday, April 1, 2020

April 1 2020 - Rooster Fools

April 1st as April Fool's Day is associated with the vain rooster, Chauntecleer, in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales.  

But this is not the Chaunticleer that Chanticleer Gardens is named for.   And there are large rooster statues at the entrance gates, and throughout the garden.  So one wonders how this pretty garden in the Philadelphia area got its name.


"The Chanticleer estate dates from the early 20th-century, when land along the Main Line of the Pennsylvania Railroad was developed for summer homes to escape the heat of Philadelphia. Adolph Rosengarten, Sr., and his wife Christine chose the Wayne-St. Davids area to build their country retreat. The family's pharmaceutical firm would become part of Merck & Company in the 1920s."

"Mr. Rosengarten's humor is evident in naming his home after the estate "Chanticlere" in Thackeray's 1855 novel The Newcomes. The fictional Chanticlere was "mortgaged up to the very castle windows" but "still the show of the county." Playing on the word, which is synonymous with "rooster," the Rosengartens used rooster motifs throughout the estate."


Chanticleer was used as the proper name of the cock in the literary cycle of Reynard the Fox.  Its definition refers to this:  a domestic rooster or cock, especially in fables and fairy tales.  
On to rooster jokes, as there aren't any Chanticleer jokes. They are mostly profane, given the job of a rooster.  On jokes sites this is the approach:
 
 


This is pretty well it for the rooster jokes.  A long, long listing of this box.  And generally, it is the same joke with variations.

So here are the remaining two jokes:


What do you call a rooster that stares at lettuce all day long?
Chicken sees a salad.

Why didn't the rooster tell Dad Jokes?
He was afraid his kids would crack up!


It's railroad day today.
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