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Jeff

A timely discussion, John, since McCain pointed out that nailing down Obama's tax proposals was like nailing Jello to the wall. But Jello is odious not only for being like tax proposals. Something about boiling down dead stuff. We're not talking chicken soup here. If a plant can get cheaper "feed" stock, will they? I'm hardly vegetarian (I ate the flesh of a little lamb yesterday at a Middle Eastern restaurant. What kind of Middle Eastern restaurant? I don't know.) but I did refuse to eat beef for a while in fear, anger, and protest about the whole Mad Cow thing ... a completely avoidable circumstance brought on by "market pressure." I.e., Greed. Sound familiar? No, I'm not ranting. Oh, and where does the glucosamine and condroitin in our joint pills come from? I don't worry about prions in the middle of the night, but I think about them sometimes when I eat a burger or take a little jello at a potluck. Must go take in the sudden thunder, lightning, and rain ... Auntie Em! Auntie Em!

John Ptak

You're right. I don't want to think about what goes into some medicines (especially for facial creams!) or how they're tested.(And what about the emulsifiers? You'd know about that stuff being a chemist and all Jeff.) The stuff at the Cow Factory and etc. that can't be used for anything else--and that is a very long list--is the stuff that is used in Jell-O. I don't know how it became a "good" idea to use a preserving agent for a foodstuff. It would certainly make good sense for the slaughterhouse/processing plant to not have to throw ANYTHING away, nothing, not even the gunk caught in the metal grids (that catch the chunky stuff) on the cutting floors. Certainly makes good sense there. But so far as eating the sugar-coated product of these sweepings, well, I dunno. Well, actually, I do know. I wonder how many times over you could fill Dorothy's house with the hooves used to manufacture a year's worth of Jell-O? I'm betting more than 100; but where does it stop, on what order of magnitude? (Now that would be an interesting visual display of quantitative data!)

Jeff

This Jello post is also uncomfortably close to the one on "Cashing out corpses." The Soylent Green generation is haunted by more than mushroom clouds. We don't just dry up like moths, unfortunately, so there's got to be an industry of some kind to get rid of us. When Laura was in Tibet with her sister in the '80s, they went to a sky burial (she had another word for it; can't recall) which is where the body is meticulously dissected and processed for the vultures that are always waiting nearby. You'll have to ask her for details. I don't remember how much detail they saw, other than the gathering of people and vultures.

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