We are so lucky that we live in CA...

<p>In n' Out. Mmm.</p>

<p>In-n-out is wayyyy overrated.</p>

<p>Not because of food quality or value, but because of ridiculous wait times--their inability to handle their customers.</p>

<p>
[quote]
As stated, the US economy would not be great without New York.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>California is supposedly the world's fifth largest economy btw (13% of U.S. GDP?). Although some newer sources say its more like 6th-8th, it's still up there. This means that its economy is bigger than all but three (five) countries outside the U.S. :)</p>

<p>gabe,</p>

<p>I usually wait around 5 minutes at most at In 'N Out. Even if you wait a bit, who cares? It's way fresher than most other fast food.</p>

<p>Yeah, I don't know where you live, but the in-n-outs here are really efficient most of the time. I agree it's overrated though. Some people just take it overboard with their acclaim :p</p>

<p>Seriously..</p>

<p>My brother actually bought an In 'N Out t-shirt. </p>

<p>I lost all respect for him.</p>

<p>janel,</p>

<p>Wow, you sound like a pretentious jerk. Congratulations.</p>

<p>First of all, In N out Burger is the MOST efficent "fast food" resturant on the planet. Where else do you find drive through attendants taking order while you are waiting in line if the line happens to be backed up?</p>

<p>As far as it being overrated..over rated by whom? </p>

<p>The quality of food, is second to none and the prices cannot be beat.</p>

<p>For fairness I must disclose my father coined the phrase "In N out, In N out thats what a hamburger is all about." My family and the Snyder family have been very close over the years...and although it has been and still remains a family owned operation...I know a certain someone who once had a financial stake... heh ;)</p>

<p>UCLA, I'm kidding. Calm the hell down.</p>

<p>mmmm ^_^ I'm going to have in-n-out tommorow!</p>

<p>janel,</p>

<p>And here I thought you picketed him for contributing to the worldwide conspiracy of hate or something.</p>

<p>:rolleyes:</p>

<p>K. I'll see if maybe, at one point in my life, I'll be able to dissect that sentence and make some sort of sense of it. Cheers.</p>

<p>It's not really that hard.</p>

<p>Picketing involves picking up a sign and...picketing.
And the worldwide conspiracy of hate is pretty self-explanatory, no?</p>

<p>Yes, but why would one picket their brother and accuse them of being involved in a "worldwide conspiracy of hate"? How does one picket their brother? </p>

<p>This reminds me of a sentence that is often used as an example for processing load in my linguistics class: "Sue sneezed the house into the universe." It bears no inductive feasibility.</p>

<p>Wow. </p>

<p>Ever heard of sarcasm and hyperbole?</p>

<p>
[quote]
Ever heard of sarcasm and hyperbole?

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Of course.</p>

<p>But, hyperbole is the exaggeration of something tangible, and sarcasm applies verbal irony to tangible situations. The statement above, however, had no such relationship with anything of ordinary semantic significance. </p>

<p>Bahahah. Let's fight. Come on. </p>

<p>Dude, I'm just messing with you honestly. I earnestly, however, was confused by that statement -- but hey, we might as well attribute this to cultural differences. I'm from Connecticut. You're from Japan. (Even though you're NOT JAPANESE).</p>

<p>Actually he is not FROM Japan but rather is currently taking up residence there..correct no?</p>

<p>wow janel wins freud's annual 'anal' award.</p>

<p>I heard on the news that a lot of kids can't pass a test on 8th/9th grade math and english...in the 12th grade</p>

<p>so.............whats ur point?</p>

<p>i'm not surprised at all.</p>