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The Gov't bans some of my favorite food|
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http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2008/fsb/0804/gallery.fo...foods.fsb/index.html
No caviar, horse meat, Sea Bass [I rufuse to eat this one anyhow]. Nice to see the gov't keeping me healthy. |
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Fine by me
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If you want horse meat, you can go to Italy. Plenty in Italy.
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Probably a good match for the wine there.
Just one more sip. |
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Isn't it the government's job to tell us what we can eat?
********************************************** "I wish I'd a been a doctor. Maybe I'd have saved some life that's been lost. Maybe I'd have done some good in the world, instead of burning every bridge I've crossed." -Bob Dylan |
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Ouch!! Funny but ouch. You may be flamed for that one. *********************** "I have drunk not to the clouding of my reason, but just so much that I can still surely distinguish the syllables with my tongue." Athenaeus |
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cdr: You are a true libertarian, my friend. Of course, the Gov't goes overboard, but the fact that they try to inspect food so it doesn't kill you isn't all that bad. (some of these bans are overboard in my view, but the line drawing is tough).
Here's the test for a true libertarian....Do you favor allowing elementary schools to have vending machines that sell heroin? A true libertarian would say, "Only if the vending machines are owned by private industry". (I now duck to avoid the attacks!) Irwin I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous |
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Actually I prefer the great wines of Priorat with my horse meat. Joe ----- Wine is like potato chips around me...if it's open, it's gone. |
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____________________ An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools. - Hemingway |
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What if you were a consequentialist? ____________________ An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools. - Hemingway |
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And now a ban on west coast salmon...OUCH!!!
Got acid? @@@@@@@@@@@@ Everyone has to believe in something. I believe I’ll have another glass of wine. |
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I bow to your experience with horsemeat. Just one more sip. |
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At least it is horseMEAT.
Irwin I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous |
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Three or four years ago, I had the pleasure of sharing some meals with tsunami in Switzerland. He served horsemeat carpaccio one night and the match was a red burgundy (memory is a bit vague here given the amount of wine consumed that evening). For another meal, he made horse flank steak that we ate with a 1990 Gaja Sori Tildin from his cellar. These were both divine eating experiences. |
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I don't mind the Government putting restrictions on fish so they can repopulate. If we left that up to the free market who knows what would happen? We had a good run with salmon and sea bass up till their extinction, but the market is changing and we must adapt, behold, high fructose hydrogenated corn fish.
The trans fat and high fructose corns syrup can go. Damn, is sugar and butter too much to ask for? Raw Milk can stay, they tried to get rid of that in CA. The two dairies drummed up a massive grass roots effort and stopped it. I say ban the bad stuff and keep the good stuff. |
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That's the problem right there. Who are you or anybody else to tell others what is "bad". It is a slippery slope you tread there Spo. One on which we seem to be sliding rapidly down. Nobody has the right to tell anyone else what they may ingest. "A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have." Gerald Ford |
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There are a few things I would be willing to have banned to end the endless integration of them into every single food product imaginable. |
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I think you are missing my point. Sure there is plenty of crap being passed off as food out there. But once you allow the health nazis to start banning things where does it end? Some day they will come for something you like.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have." Gerald Ford |
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I read an article by Jeffrey Steingarten in which he experimented with making fries in horse fat with good results, but the meat? Is it good?
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Besides, the government is not very good at picking the "good" or "bad" foods. Consider federal subsidies for high fructose corn syrup, trans-fatty acids, and tobacco. All once touted by our government for their health benefits. Consider ketchup, originally considered a non-nutritious condiment. Reagan, in the 80s, proclaimed it a vegetable. Shortly thereafter it was relegated to junk food status, and now is widely hailed (minus the high fructose corn syrup) as a healthy source of lypocene. Consider government warnings against eggs - too high in cholesterol - now known to contain "good" cholesterol. Same story with olive oil, etc. etc. The problem with the feds making these choices is that once a product is deemed “good or “bad”, a vested tax-supported constituency becomes established to maintain the status quo. I say let privately funded entities do the research on nutritional safety, and let the consumers decide. At least you can sue a private concern when they are wrong. Changing the government’s stance, considering the involvement of armies of lobbyists, is nearly impossible. Got acid? @@@@@@@@@@@@ Everyone has to believe in something. I believe I’ll have another glass of wine. |
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Wine Spectator Forums
Dining and Cooking
The Gov't bans some of my favorite food