chesswarsnow
"SASQUATCH IS WATCHING"
Sorry bout that,
1. Curious, with no real understanding of the issues?
2. You want to know, right?
3, And yet in knowing you have no opinion about these things your aware of.
4. You may be a *Curious Moron*.
5. Learning to identify yourself is your first step forward.
6. Learning to just accept your a moron, and move forward is something, you should learn to embrace.
7. Wide eyed stupid is embarrassing.
8. Stop nodding your head, when the answers come in, we know you are not up-taking it.
9. Being curious isn't a way to gather knowledge, you would be better to study instead.
10. Katie Couric, 66, says ‘endless curiosity’ is ‘key to aging well’: ‘I feel about 35’
Kerry Justich
Tue, March 28, 2023, 10:57 AM CDT·4 min read
Katie Couric on feeling "very lucky and very blessed" despite hardship. (Photo: Getty Images; illustration by Quinn Lemmers)
Katie Couric is the journalist of a generation, spending over three decades educating and entertaining America through conversations with prominent politicians, household-name celebrities and everyday people. Still, even with all those questions, there's one she hasn't yet gotten answered — "What happens when you die?" — and it nags at her.
Regards,
SirJamesofTexas
1. Curious, with no real understanding of the issues?
2. You want to know, right?
3, And yet in knowing you have no opinion about these things your aware of.
4. You may be a *Curious Moron*.
5. Learning to identify yourself is your first step forward.
6. Learning to just accept your a moron, and move forward is something, you should learn to embrace.
7. Wide eyed stupid is embarrassing.
8. Stop nodding your head, when the answers come in, we know you are not up-taking it.
9. Being curious isn't a way to gather knowledge, you would be better to study instead.
10. Katie Couric, 66, says ‘endless curiosity’ is ‘key to aging well’: ‘I feel about 35’
Katie Couric, 66, says ‘endless curiosity’ is ‘key to aging well’: ‘I feel about 35’
Kerry Justich
Tue, March 28, 2023, 10:57 AM CDT·4 min read
Katie Couric on feeling "very lucky and very blessed" despite hardship. (Photo: Getty Images; illustration by Quinn Lemmers)
Katie Couric is the journalist of a generation, spending over three decades educating and entertaining America through conversations with prominent politicians, household-name celebrities and everyday people. Still, even with all those questions, there's one she hasn't yet gotten answered — "What happens when you die?" — and it nags at her.
Regards,
SirJamesofTexas