(Part 2) Top products from r/cringe

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We found 20 product mentions on r/cringe. We ranked the 121 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/cringe:

u/Jermacide1 · 3 pointsr/cringe

Why is there a bottle of olive oil on the table? Is it supposed to be a symbol of the olive branch references in the bible? This dude couldn't be any lazier could he? I mean you can literally buy a nice decorative olive branch on Amazon and have it delivered in one day. Praise Jesus!!

u/cloudcats · 3 pointsr/cringe

He's got a very interesting book about his experience, called Adrift: 76 Days Lost at Sea.

I highly recommend it if you like adventure/survival stories.

u/pencilears · 1 pointr/cringe

I'd say you could give them books by Dianna Wynne Jones Vivian Van Verde, Ursula LeGuin, or Jane Yolen.

but there's all kinds of folktakes and fairytales they might like with legitimately strong women and girls.

u/HittingSmoke · 1 pointr/cringe

If you can't read what's already been laid out for you, I'm not going to hold your hand.

http://www.amazon.com/Scholastic-Success-Reading-Comprehension-Grade/dp/0545200822/ref=sr_1_6

u/KTY_ · 16 pointsr/cringe

This book is pretty good too and touches on data manipulation using maps.

TRIGGER WARNING: CANADIAN AMAZON

u/digestivecookie · 6 pointsr/cringe

Her picture on amazon is ridiculous.

J.K. Rowling should use the same pose for hers.

Edit:

The first 5-star review of her first book (Avg rating of 2 stars) reads:

"Macedonia and the Seventh Bridge is a great feature of life and it is more surpassing than the quran,Dr. Soos and even the Lords of the Kings. You will wish you read this book even after your see it because there are things in life like wisom, love and happiness and all are Maradonia. 'Gloria Trash' is a porigidy between Albert Einstain and Jebus because she writs words that are for the soul and you will know what life is after you eat it. Macedonia and the Seven are aboot seven children name Miya and Joe who travels to the wolds behind worlds and must defeat the darkness. The darkness is 'Alana Terrece' who is a momber of the 'Gottik Movement' and she is evil because she lessens to Ke$ha, who are the consumerism of symbolic. There is no lief after reading the Macedonia, and after the end I commemorate suicide, but or is not to lose because there are NIEN sequals to the after end den lives can be lived again, such as the Old of Ophir and the Law of Blow, which are the masterworks of even greatness potentinal than Shake Spears, Britney Spears and Spears Morgan. You will know the law of the universe and soon every bathroom will have Morondonia and the Elven Ophirs, because the universe. If I stay then you must go, so buy the Macedonia today by drilling dis number. Fear is for the not!" - creatinine

Brilliant review.

u/Stange · 2 pointsr/cringe

I read this one book The Honest Truth About Dishonesty: How We Lie to Everyone--Especially Ourselves, and there was one section that essentially talked about how it was the classic slippery slope method that lands people into these mindsets.

Essentially he makes one little lie about the military and because it's only a little lie he allows himself to think it's okay morally ("I just took one or two candy from the store, nothing big"). Because of this he has set his morality slightly lower without fully realizing it, which means he will make another small lie about the military, and this continues on.

It's one of the main reasons politicians can end up starting out with smaller bribes and then eventually see themselves taking massive bribes. If we allow ourselves to lie and cheat only a little bit we can still think of ourselves as good people (because it's only a little bit, nothing big), but some of us without realizing it will end up making bigger and bigger lies over time because we change the line bit by bit.

u/JoelKizz · 1 pointr/cringe

Well it's a big big question. The framers believed all sorts of things and weren't nearly so monolithic in their perspective as politicians seem today.

If I could only have one book on what the framers themselves believed I'd go with this:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0700603115/ref=redir_mdp_mobile/178-6525660-7786257

Its a dry somewhat technical read but its rigorous.

u/fucknozzle · 33 pointsr/cringe

When I was a kid, my cat got hit by a car and died.

My Mum, seeing how upset I was about it, thought she'd pick me up a present on the way home from work to cheer me up.

I think she bought me a record or something.

It was a few years later that she told me she'd first gone to a bookshop, asked the guy what funny book he'd recommend, and he said 'How about this one - "100 things to do with a dead cat?"'.

[edit] - it was 101 things

u/likwidtek · 1 pointr/cringe

This is the promotional video for her book.

Ugh, I could only make it to about :58

u/imaginarylemons · 10 pointsr/cringe

Exactly!! You should read the John Lennon Letters, it shows a lot of "other" John, a broken, hopeless romantic who has a lot on his mind.

u/howardson1 · 3 pointsr/cringe

Crackers were poor white scottish settlers in the south during the late 1700's. Many of them were indentured servants and bond servants. Cracker culture is considered to be similar to todays ghetto culture, in that drinking was emphsized and education was looked down upon, and people labeled crackers lived in poverty in the Appalachia. The first people who used the slur crackers were wealthy slave owning planters who looked down upon poor whites. The bullwhip theory is not the only one, some have suggested that cracker came about because corn was the staple food of poor whites. So cracker does have a history of oppression and classism attached to it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cracker_(pejorative)

http://www.amazon.com/They-Were-White-Slaves-Enslavement/dp/0929903056
Discusses indentured slavery and debt bondage among poor whites.