Dagwood avatar

dagwood92 Free

Recent Comments

  1. almost 13 years ago on Bob the Squirrel

    You have to go to OCS first, Bob. No free rides!

  2. almost 13 years ago on Off the Mark

    If he’s fully vested, then he’s really got something to worry about! LOL

  3. almost 13 years ago on Pickles

    Earl needs to take a lesson from my household. If he does the dishes every night, not only is he guaranteed a hot, home-cooked full course meal the next day, but he’d get dessert, too! LOLThe Pavlov theory really does work, especially on hubbies! LOL

  4. almost 13 years ago on Pickles

    Knowing Earl, Opal will probably end upwiping the handle off.-——————————Ah, but Earl’s consequence would be no dinner! PBJ’s again…

  5. almost 13 years ago on Peanuts

    And God forbid Linus should let go of the blanket.-——————————What, and commit heresy? Sacrilege? Would be out of character for Linus Van Pelt. He’s already wearing stripes, so why not punch the Beagle and trade down for black-and-white?

  6. almost 13 years ago on Garfield

    Garfield will put up with anything and everything for his daily servings of lasagna!

  7. almost 13 years ago on Pluggers

    I have the hard plastic one…so neither the dog nor the kid can puncture it!

  8. almost 13 years ago on B.C.

    I was actually expecting something more punny, like Grog going back into the cave and coming out with a real bat…or maybe Batman.

  9. almost 13 years ago on Pluggers

    Wait a minute: CEOs can be pluggers, too. They’re not all Enron cheats, either. Many of them have worked their way up from the front line to the executive HQ…and many still continue to work hard, putting in 10-12 hour days or more trying to make the difficult decisions that the wage earner on the front line depends on for a job.As one who aspires to become the CEO of my own business, I resent the notion that CEO automatically means “white collar,” country clubs, limousines and plush offices…with little or no work actually being done.My dad was a regional marketing manager when his company laid him off. He was a “white collar” worker, and yet, no one else I know worked as hard to support his family, or dedicated himself to his job and his company as my dad. He was as much a member of the “working class” as the delivery truck driver he started out as.