Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Name a object that relates to business that I can give a mini speech on?

Some examples that other people are doing is like credit cards...because it teaches you to be responsible. I'm a funny guy so anything that you can think of that is funny is cool too. I just got to give a speech about how an object or item relates to business.Name a object that relates to business that I can give a mini speech on?
A simple deck of cards or a pair of dice (pair o' dice) which can represent the big time business of gaming or gambling now present in an increasing number of states thanks to the inluence of IGT or International Gaming Technology of Reno, Nevada. Indian Gaming is the ultimate Native American bloodless revenge against whitey for stealing land. A matchbook from a legal Nevada brothel can lead you to ultimate riches as the potential owner/founder of a famous Nevada landmark also known as a ';cat house'; and I do not mean ';pet sanctuary.'; Start your speech off by striking a match and you will get their attention. eMail me if you want stats and additional data to support my ';wild'; claims also supported by the IRS. LOL.Name a object that relates to business that I can give a mini speech on?
Can you juggle?
communication
Bike riding: it teaches you how important it is to conserve energy.





Make a video of you riding a bike as fast as you can on a flat surface; then, attempt to ride the bike up a steep incline, causing you to run out of energy and fall down...Be creative, maybe incorporating food as fuel, as well.





Good luck.
Condoms, it helps people avoid child support.
The cup of coffee. **





Where would a business be without that morning cup of coffee?


There are strangely convincing theories about how coffee triggered revolution, colonialism, slavery, and economic inequality.


The Industrial Revolution depended on it.





Read this:





Coffee and the Industrial Revolution





Coffee's growing popularity complemented and sustained the Industrial Revolution, which began in Great Britain during the 1700s and spread to other parts of Europe and North America in the early 1800s. The development of the factory system transformed lives, attitudes, and eating habits. Most people previously had worked at home or in rural craft workshops. They had not divided their time so strictly between work and leisure, and they were largely their own masters. People typically ate five times a day, beginning with soup for breakfast.





With the advent of textile and iron mills, workers migrated to the cities, where the working classes lived in appalling conditions. As women and children entered the organized workforce, there was less time to run a household and cook meals. Those still trying to make a living at home were paid less and less for their work. Thus, European lacemakers in the early nineteenth century lived almost exclusively on coffee and bread. Because coffee was stimulating and warm, it provided an illusion of nutrition.





';Seated uninterruptedly at their looms, in order to earn the few pennies necessary for their bare survival,'; writes one historian, ';[workers had] no time for the lengthy preparation of a midday or evening meal. And weak coffee was drank as a last stimulant for the weakened stomach which鈥攆or a brief time at least鈥攕tilled the gnawing pangs of hunger.'; The drink of the aristocracy had become the necessary drug of the masses, and morning coffee replaced beer soup for breakfast.
Big Mac Meal - the adverage minimum wage is usually about equal to the price of a McDonalds meal.
Checkbooks....and hating to wait in line behind the old lady that refuses to get a debit card. Plus, it slows a store's sales.
The telephone, it lets people communicate.

No comments:

Post a Comment