<projectile vomits>
--
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/12/22-10
cageprisoners.com|www.snuhwolf.9f.com|www.eyeonpalin.org
_____ ____ ____ __ /\_/\ __ _ ______ _____
/ __/ |/ / / / / // // . . \\ \ |\ | / __ \ \ \ __\
_\ \/ / /_/ / _ / \ / \ \| \| \ \_\ \ \__\ _\
/___/_/|_/\____/_//_/ \_@_/ \__|\__|\____/\____\_\
excellent
nothing like a little ammonia in your food
For my job I occasionally have the rare privilege of going into meat
processing companies
Though I really saw no obvious unsanitary conditions
I decided to quit eating meat.
I still eat chicken and fish and thankfully
I have no customers that process them...
or I'd probably stop eating them too
> Screw ya if ya don't get the literary ref...Really? Upton Sinclair not
> on yer reading list in high school? No wonder you turned out all messed
> up in the head. Heres a modern example of the same old problem:
> http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/31/us/31meat.html?_r=1
>
> <projectile vomits>
Mmmmmmmm. Yum yum.
--
Las autoridades sanitarias advierten:
Fumar perjudica gravemente su salud
y la de los que están a su alrededor
--
Old Gringo
Just West Of Nowhere
Enjoy Life And Live It To Its Fullest
http://www.NuBoy-Industries.com
KFC
Have not eaten there in many years
It can be eaten
even if not sterilized
actually
not such a good one
reminds me of the "Moose Turn Pie" story
told by Utah Phillips
The food business is a nasty one
but I guess it beats the alternative of starving to death
My god, but its good tho!
"It's good though" has been a running joke between me and my daughter
for over 20 years.
I first heard about Utah Phillips maybe 35 years ago when this couple I
knew came back from hitch-hiking around the country (those were the days)
They had been picked up by him and brought his album back
what a great guy he was!
in fact "good though"
LOL
"The frozen hamburgers that the Smiths ate, which were made by
the food giant Cargill, were labeled �American Chef�s Selection
Angus Beef Patties.� Yet confidential grinding logs and other
Cargill records show that the hamburgers were made from a mix of
slaughterhouse trimmings and a mash-like product derived from
scraps that were ground together at a plant in Wisconsin."
from http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/04/health/04meat.html?fta=y
copied without permission
"Mash-like product" !!!
Love it!
rare privilege... I get it!! Well done!
Aardvark <aard...@youllnever.know> wrote:
> On Sun, 03 Jan 2010 14:20:10 -0700, §nühw¤£f wrote:
>> <projectile vomits>
>
> Mmmmmmmm. Yum yum.
> I like life in the fast lane, but I'm always in the pits.
*COUGH*
LOL
I had sure missed that when I wrote it
The *alternetive* is to Buy Local. Make a decision to support small
farmers and visit a farmers market. You can make a lot of good contacts
that way. Even in cities theres people who are doing small plot
operations or raising chickens in their backyards. If you dont like what
Big Food industry produces, dont eat it.
HTH
Yes I go to the farmer's market every weekend during the summer
and I have always grown at least some of my own food
d00d! you so totally tr00led me with your fakey claims of starvation!
LULZ!
No I ain't starvin' here
as long as there is food to eat all is well
I can only recall once that I totally ran out of money (1972)
It was a weekend and my GI Bill check was due on Monday
I had no food and no money
it was winter and it was snowing.
I did not know what I was going to do
but I decided I'd go down into the basement of the apartment I was
living in and figure something out
Well there was a large lead pipe down there and and old girl's bike
with a basket on it.
The tires still had at least some air in them
so I rolled the pipe up as best I could
put it in the basket
and peddled the bike several miles through the snow and took the pipe
to the junk yard.
maybe the pipe was worth it
or maybe the guy felt sorry for me
but I got two dollars and ten cents
wow...I was expecting maybe 50 cents
I went to the store and bought dried beans and lentils
and even a few other odds and ends
and made some nice soup
enough to last the weekend
But I'd hardly call that a down and out story...
more one of optimism
> but I got two dollars and ten cents
>
> wow...I was expecting maybe 50 cents
>
>
> I went to the store and bought dried beans and lentils
>
> and even a few other odds and ends
>
> and made some nice soup
>
> enough to last the weekend
In 1972 you could actually buy some groceries for $2.50
> But I'd hardly call that a down and out story...
> more one of optimism
A down and out story about the value of a dollar.
A down and out story would have been
if the guy used the lead pipe to rob me
0_o
--
http://www.democracyforamerica.com/