COMMENTS: 164
Glenn Beck's Bizarre Outburst Against Meatless Mondays and Vegetarians
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Jon Stewart ended an interview with climate-change contrarian and Super Freakonomics co-author Steven Levitt on Monday night by noting, "I've apparently frightened our audience by suggesting that conservation isn't the only way out of any of the problems of the world. I sincerely apologize."
He added, "And I do also believe that we should just eat vegetables."
I'd love to report that Stewart has embraced Michael Pollan's "eat food/not too much/mostly plants" edict. But, of course, Stewart was only joking. The line drew a big laugh from the audience.
The interview followed a report on the Whole Foods "buycott" from Daily Show correspondent Wyatt Cenac asking "whether conservative hatred of liberals is so strong it can make them buy organic food."
Fresh fruits and vegetables remain the Rodney Dangerfield of the Western diet, getting no respect from cable commentators -- the comics or the crackpots. Stewart's mock endorsement of mock duck came on the same day as an anti-tofurkey tirade from Glenn Beck, who echoed Lou Dobbs' recent condemnation of the Meatless Monday campaign adopted by Baltimore's school cafeterias as a form of "indoctrination":
"Americans love our steaks, we love our chops, we love our burgers, and you'll throw me in jail, my last meal will be a giant steak. Are we going to stand for that? Are we going to put up with this? Well, you'd think not, but in Baltimore, Md., public schools have now started, in the schools -- no indoctrination here -- Meatless Monday. No meat on the menu for 80,000 kids that they serve, no meat, that way the students that they serve can quote 'eat and learn about healthy, environmentally friendly choices.' "
Beck has struck ratings gold with his weepy, creepy brand of small-minded faux populism. He's not a big picture kind of guy. It takes a wider perspective than a tea bagger's tunnel vision to connect the dots between: a) the wars we're mired in; b) our fossil-fuel-dependent way of life; c) the perils of climate change; and d) our meat-dominated diet.
He prefaced his anti-Meatless Monday rant by mocking President Barack Obama for taking time out from agonizing over Afghanistan to deliver a speech at a solar-power plant in Florida, in which the president emphasized the need to invest in clean, renewable energy. Beck sneered:
"I'd hate to have the president rush a decision on Afghanistan, I'd hate to have him cut short his solar-panel trip today ... get a nap in, Mr. President, before you deal with the war ..."
Beck belongs to the "pump all you want, we'll drill more" camp, so, from his petrocentric perspective, fighting two wars in the oil-rich Middle East presumably makes more sense than exploring alternative ways to meet America's massive energy needs.
And, since he's also a skeptic on climate change, why worry about reducing our greenhouse-gas emissions?
In fact, it's the folks who are calling on us all to curb our carbon footprint who pose the greatest threat to "U.S. sovereignty," according to Beck. He cited a quote from U.K. climate chief Lord Stern in Monday's Times Online:
"Meat is a wasteful use of water and creates a lot of greenhouse gases. It puts enormous pressure on the world's resources. A vegetarian diet is better."
Beck added:
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Posted by: jreal on Oct 30, 2009 1:13 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can someone please remove this whole Post.
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» RE: Watch Out, the Above Link might be a Virus
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Watch Out, the Above Link might be a Virus
Posted by: Longdream
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Posted by: MMarauder on Oct 30, 2009 4:25 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: peterjkraus on Oct 30, 2009 4:29 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ergo....
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» RE: You are what you eat......
Posted by: Cybershaman
» RE: You are what you eat......
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ThomasJefferson on Oct 30, 2009 5:55 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like most of those right wing tools, they only hate government things that don't concern them.
I would love to see how they would keep the roads repaired if they ever got their way.
morons
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» RE: It's like this...let the Libertarians have their town
Posted by: Changling
» RE: it's like this...
Posted by: KRC
» RE: it's like this...if you have the money you can live
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: bandofotters on Oct 30, 2009 6:06 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can they move it to Fridays out of respect to Catholics who may still practise the tradition or would there be some violation of separation of church & state (whatever that means)?
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» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: redmond
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: ginny
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: Birdland
» 1 out of 21 meals in a week
Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: cosgrovewatt
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: jupiter9
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: penina
» RE: Nothing wrong here? Reduce meat intake by 90%
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: jinglebts
» Who said anything about "only" fruits and vegies?
Posted by: LightningJoe
» I bet they won't have Cokeless Mondays
Posted by: Beck
» RE: You can take any action and speculate what might happen if extended.
Posted by: Plexius2
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: Rwaggs81
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: penina
» Nothing to do with you, think of the animal victims and our childrens future
Posted by: TomOfMaine
» RE: Nothing to do with you, think of the animal victims and our childrens future
Posted by: penina
» RE: Nothing to do with you, think of the animal victims and our childrens future
Posted by: LightningJoe
» The right to live?
Posted by: penina
» Beer is not a necessity either
Posted by: penina
» Really...can you be MORE extreme?
Posted by: cyungbluth
» extreme?
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: freshlemon on Oct 30, 2009 6:21 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since when does eating healthy food without meat equal indoctrination? Indoctrination to what? Healthy eating?
Eating meat is the "manly" way I guess for a simpering coward like him. It will take a lot more than eating meat for old pasty face to be manly. I,for one,would like to see him eat a lot of crow.
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» RE: Indoctrination to what? Healthy eating? Green living.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Drama Queen Beck--his manly Mormon way
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Drama Queen Beck
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Drama Queen Beck-You too KRC
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Drama Queen Beck-You too KRC
Posted by: KRC
» RE: In a depression how is that working for you?
Posted by: Changling
» test scores?
Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: test scores?
Posted by: KRC
» RE: test scores?
Posted by: freshlemon
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ebishirl on Oct 30, 2009 6:48 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In fact, a report released just this week found that climate inaction will lead to dramatically higher food prices in the UK, largely because environmental stresses will lead to reduced yields of staple food crops like wheat and rice. It warns that Britons could be paying £6.50 for a loaf of bread and £18 for a pint of beer by the year 2030.
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» It might change more than that.
Posted by: Beck
» RE: It will change more than that. See it Beck?
Posted by: Changling
» Think about it
Posted by: penina
» RE: Think about it more carefully
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Think about it more carefully
Posted by: penina
» RE: Then your fine. The economy will do it for us
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Then your fine. The economy will do it for us
Posted by: penina
» RE: It takes a 10=1 ratio for meat from veggies, vegg 1=1
Posted by: Changling
» You make no sense
Posted by: penina
» RE: You make no sense either
Posted by: Changling
» RE: You make no sense either
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Beck on Oct 30, 2009 7:01 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Actually, I think we could give all those a shot. It is human life on the planet we're talking about. But the point I'm making is why continue choosing things that will not happen? We could choose thermostats at 58. We can't "choose" vegetarianism except for the period of time we're living off our stores of iron and B12 or using supplements to delude ourselves. Go ahead, project impossible scenarios and then claim only that scenario will save us. It's the worst, laziest, most futile attempt possible.
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» Hear Hear
Posted by: luther6
» RE: Hear Hear
Posted by: Beck
» RE: Bull-shit disingeneus argument
Posted by: dogtor
» beck, i know dozens (or hundreds) of vegetarians and vegans
Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: beck, i know dozens (or hundreds) of vegetarians and vegans
Posted by: penina
» Lies and misconceptions
Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: Lies and misconceptions-You are SOOOO Right
Posted by: dcande01
» RE: Lies and misconceptions
Posted by: penina
» RE: There is no "animal flesh fetish"
Posted by: Kathy-B
» RE: There is ONLY endemic antibiotics, hormones and
Posted by: dogtor
» Wednesday is the first "Why Fly Wednesday"
Posted by: Beck
» Use advanced tech
Posted by: BlueTigress
» RE: I've met some of those self described "carnivores"
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 30, 2009 7:02 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The real agenda of this movement is not to give rights to animals, but to take rights from people—to dictate our food, clothing, work, recreation, and whether we will discover new medications or die."
Identical assertions could have been made about the abolition of human slavery, the crusade to end child labor, the liberation of concentration camp prisoners from Nazi physicians or an end to the experimentation upon black humans by white humans.
Marquardt writes that the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) "now encourages vegetarianism, the banning of fur, and the eventual end to all animal research, not just ‘cruel’ animal research." Marquardt writes that the Humane Society now supports vegetarianism.
According to Marquardt, "The typical animal rights activist is a white woman making about $30,000 a year. She is most likely a schoolteacher, nurse, or government worker. She usually has a college degree or even an advanced degree, is in her thirties or forties, and lives in a city."
Marquardt cites studies indicating that animal rights activists tend to identify with liberal causes such as feminism and environmentalism. "Every year," writes the Reverend Andrew Linzey, author of Christianity and the Rights of Animals, "I receive hundreds of anguished letters from Christians who are so distressed by the insensitivity to animals shown by mainstream churches that they have left them or are on the verge of doing so." It is not surprising, therefore, that Marquardt reports that "Most activists share a bias against Western civilization and its Judeo-Christian foundations."
According to Marquardt, the "political clout" of the animal rights movement "is surprisingly bipartisan. But most of the leading politicians working with the animal rights movement are liberal Democrats." Marquardt mentions Senator Barbara Boxer of California, Nevada Congressman Jim Bilbray, Charlie Rose of North Carolina, Tom Lantos and Gerry Studds.
Marquardt admits, however, "some Republicans are animal rightists, too. Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas often supports animal rights causes—except, of course, those pertaining to cattle, a major business in Kansas. Senator Robert Smith of New Hampshire was a founder of the Congressional Friends of Animals. Bob Dornan of California, one of the most conservative House members, is an animal rights advocate—he cosponsored legislation banning the use of animals in testing cosmetics and received a PETA award. And Manhattan Congressman Bill Green promoted legislation that would have shut down over 90 million acres of federal land to hunting, fishing, and trapping."
Marquardt states further that "Although he’s not an elected official, a conservative political figure who, surprisingly, is on the other side is G. Gordon Liddy, author Will and a key figure in the 1972 Watergate uproar. When I went on Liddy’s radio show, he and PETA’s Ingrid Newkirk greeted each other with hugs and kisses and lots of warm words.
"With allies in both political parties and across the ideological spectrum," concludes Marquardt, "the animal rights movement has been able to score some great successes, regardless of which party controls the White House or Capitol Hill."
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» RE: I Smell Big Ag/ Big Beef Shill
Posted by: dogtor
» EAT LESS MEAT
Posted by: dogtor
» I prefer Big Ag over Big Gov
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: moloko velocet on Oct 30, 2009 7:03 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seriously, I've never once watched or listened to any of these idiots...and don't really care one whit, about their agenda-driven propaganda. I wholly dismiss them in the same way I do an irritating commercial. I believe, at this point, that everyone who peruses this site (who is not a wing-nut troll) fully understands these people, and have the same opinion of them.
Why then, do we have at least one article per week decrying the latest glurp spewed by Beck or one of the others? Rehashing (and re-posting) the same invectives every week is perfectly pointless.
Switch it off....and ignore them...you're not going to stop them, and they're not going away.
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» RE: Ignoring them is the wrong way too
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: penina
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: Morell
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: penina
» RE: Alternet is Beck's worst advertising agent
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: Morell
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Augustus_818 on Oct 30, 2009 7:15 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» What's the differnce between a Libertarian and a Rethuglican?
Posted by: Karlh
» RE: What's the differnce between a Libertarian and a Rethuglican?
Posted by: leftinAK
» Libertarians better than Democrats & Republicans put together
Posted by: Cooltruth
» RE: Libertarians better than Democrats & Republicans put together
Posted by: Morell
» RE: Glenn Beck is NOT, I repeat NOT A LIBERTARIAN
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» Logic is not your strong suit, is it, reverend?
Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: Well then tell Beck that, for he calls himself one!
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: w0x0f on Oct 30, 2009 7:39 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Challenged to create a veggie menu, only one (IIRC) of the chefs managed to remember that even vegetarians need protein, and whipped up a nice lentil dish to go with whatever else was on the plate.
The others created nice veggie dishes that would have served as side dishes on a meat-eaters' menu.
Get a clue, people, and get familiar with the concept of providing protein with creative grain and legume dishes.
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» RE: Meaty mindset
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: As long as you know they aren't complete proteins and have no B12 or usable iron
Posted by: cosgrovewatt
» Sorry, Bud
Posted by: Eric.Arthur.Blair
» Sorry, Eric
Posted by: Kieran076
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ClaudineMe on Oct 30, 2009 8:00 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: KRC
» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: penina
» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: Morell
» Inconvenient lies
Posted by: penina
» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ClaudineMe on Oct 30, 2009 8:08 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: Bushmaster on Oct 30, 2009 8:11 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's scarier than Beck is that there are enough people out there to make him a profitable commodity.
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» RE: Beck
Posted by: KRC
Comments are closed-
Posted by: leftinAK on Oct 30, 2009 8:51 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate Glenn Beck just as much as the next intelligent individual.
But AlterNet!
Please get out of this rut of publishing authors who whine instead of write.
Beck is far from being a libertarian and this "MOOOOOOOM!!! Glen is bothering me again!" bullshit is getting sickening.
REAL JOURNALISM PLEASE
thank you.
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» RE: Glenn Beck is NOT a libertarian
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Glenn Beck: ''Every day that goes by, I'm more and more libertarian.''
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Glenn Beck is NOT a libertarian
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on Oct 30, 2009 9:20 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
2002, Brit Diplomat in Uzbekistan Witnessed CIA Rendition Flights, Proof of Torture
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» RE: What is he covering up?
Posted by: zipper696
» Torture
Posted by: penina
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Posted by: nousername on Oct 30, 2009 10:23 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: The_Lazy_Left on Oct 30, 2009 12:03 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you take off your blinders you will see Beck attacks Republicans more than you currently think. This suggests that to some extent Beck isn't a "system man."
Beck challenges people to shake the system up - which is a threat to so called left wing sites like Alternet who prefer a passive sheeple approach.
Notice that Alternet never leads a collective group action? The function of Alternet is too provide a vent for the frustrations of the left, rendering them less potent.
You might counter that Alternet publishes articles which attack corporate America. So what? you think a pin prick goes noticed? The banking industry could care less.
George Soros is the founder and primary financial supporter of Alternet. Do you think he wants you to change the system? Think again.
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» RE: Oh, jesus christ, tin foil hat a little tight today?
Posted by: ETSpoon
» RE: George Soros is the founder and primary financial supporter of Alternet.
Posted by: armorypk
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Changling on Oct 30, 2009 12:21 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Wooohooo! I'm dangerous!
Posted by: penina
» RE: Know nothings running a country is dangerous for everyone
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Know nothings running a country is dangerous for everyone
Posted by: penina
» RE:What world have you been living in?
Posted by: Changling
» RE: What world have you been living in?
Posted by: penina
» RE: What world have you been living in? Really.
Posted by: Changling
» My world was fine up til now
Posted by: penina
» How do you catch wild hogs?
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ETSpoon on Oct 30, 2009 1:52 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's as simple as that.
As far as Steven Levitt being a "climate-change contrarian", that's a misrepresentation and...well it's just plain wrong. Levitt and co-author Stephen Dubner are not global warming deniers, as is the above mentioned wing nut moron Beck.
They are just examining other methods of achieving climatic cooling other than carbon reduction. And their's is a more technological approach than the "let's all eat our veggies and turn out the lights" mantra of the ideologically pure left.
Writes Levitt:"Reducing carbon emissions is not a great way of cooling the Earth in a hurry for two key reasons: (1) even if we cut carbon emissions today, the Earth will continue warming for decades; and (2) reducing carbon emissions is expensive, with a price tag of at least $1 trillion per year.
"A much better approach, we conclude, is geoengineering. The scientific evidence suggests that either the stratoshield or increased oceanic clouds would have a large and immediate impact on cooling the Earth, unlike carbon-emission reductions. The cost of these solutions is trivial compared to the cost of lowering carbon emissions — literally thousands of times cheaper!"
It is a religious-like height of folly to hold on to one and one only solution to global climate change and warming. After all human stupidity knows no boundaries in regards to education, socio-economic class or generation.
So when it comes to solving the greatest dilemma facing the current generations and those of the future, all avenues of research must be explored.
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» RE: Look, Beck's a contrarian of the waste till you drop variety
Posted by: Changling
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Posted by: Eric.Arthur.Blair on Oct 30, 2009 2:52 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Glenn, my boy, I will personally buy you the biggest steak in town if you promise that it will be you absolutely last meal.
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» Articles Like This Make Beck Look Reasonable
Posted by: ChicagoWay
» RE: I'm Buying! Get to that heart failure sooner
Posted by: Changling
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Posted by: ChicagoWay on Oct 30, 2009 4:03 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most "normal" people (read voters) view radical Vegans about like they view the average Martian.
Vegan and PETA preachers will spend endless amounts of energy - and ink in AlterNet's case - trying to force their religion on others. They often remind me of the Seventh-Day Adventist that will not leave your door step until you take one of their pamphlets ....or slam the door in their face.
They easily fit right in with the other eco-religionist and Marxist social reformers that have hijacked the environmental movement. They are absolutely determined to re-make society in their own image. In reality all they do is turn “normal” people off – including real environmentalist that want real solutions.
If I have to choose between them and a meat eating Beck - please pass the A-1 Sauce.
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» RE: So you'll choose Beck?
Posted by: ETSpoon
» Responses like yours make articles like this seem necessary
Posted by: Kieran076
» RE: esponses like yours make articles like this seem necessary
Posted by: penina
» RE: Articles Like This Make Beck Look Reasonable
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Articles Like This Make Beck Look Reasonable-to psychos
Posted by: Changling
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Posted by: Beck on Oct 31, 2009 6:32 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now, sometimes I personally stay home on Saturdays, but today I am not. However, if all of you do, I can remain firm in my idea about this and not feel too guilty, or guilty at all. OR I can do this: do everything I was planning to do on Saturdays on some other day. THAT will work!
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Posted by: mattylou on Oct 31, 2009 6:39 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: fish on friday
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Bring your own if you can't go without for one meal
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford on Oct 31, 2009 7:37 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On meatless mondays...Keep in mind...
There's absolutely nothing stopping those kids from having a full bacon/sausage breakfast before they get to school, and there's nothing stopping them from getting a nice big slab of steak for dinner once they're back home from school.
Glenn Beck is quite literally, protesting going meatless for ONE meal on ONE day of the week.
Why is this bitter, resentful little man still allowed to be on the air?
Oh yeah...
Because it would be an unforgivable crime to put a liberal talk show host on the air instead.
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» RE: Yes, Beck...
Posted by: KRC
» good job, retard...
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford
» RE: good job, retard...
Posted by: KRC
» um, yes...
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Longdream on Oct 31, 2009 7:38 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: charles000 on Oct 31, 2009 6:41 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would offer that this dubious character who fancies himself as some sort of "talent" of the talk show radio universe, really does possess the attributes of over cooked, boiled okra.
Okra, when over cooked, becomes a seedy, slimy, gelatinous mass which is putrid smelling, and looking.
My only reservation in making such an assessment is that this is a bit unfair to the okra . . . but I digress
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Posted by: BlueTigress on Nov 1, 2009 10:08 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Peanut butter sandwiches
Posted by: penina
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Posted by: smadaj on Nov 1, 2009 10:47 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: He's already cutting back on the snacks i.e. M&M's
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: LightningJoe on Nov 2, 2009 5:07 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Such as artificial growth hormones. Such as the built-up doses of antibiotics, meant to control the sicknesses caused by inhumane conditions of confinement. Such as the antibiotic-resistant organisms that are evolved by such practices.
This is what causes cancers; much more than the consumption of the meat itself. Humans live a long time, and our fat bio-concentrates everything we eat that can't be excreted by natural processes. The artificially-manufactured bio-mimitec hormones we ingest with our meat build up in our tissues, and sooner or later induce coding errors in our DNA, leading to cancers.
Supporting the cruel manufacture of meat gives us cancer.
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» RE: Aside from the ethics of it, it's just not very healthy to eat meat these days.
Posted by: penina
» RE: Aside from the ethics of it, it's just not very healthy to eat meat these days.
Posted by: dseilhan
Comments are closed-
Posted by: dseilhan on Nov 4, 2009 9:21 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It looks like huge amounts of meat to you, in the same way a bucket of water looks like a lot of water to someone who has recently staggered out of the desert. But really, we could eat a lot more animal foods than we do, and we could eat a lot more varied animal foods than we do. It is argued by those with more sense than PETA that one of the reasons so many of us are malnourished now is that we think organ meats are yucky. There are people who can't turn beta carotene into vitamin A (i.e., diabetics and the hypothyroid, among others), so most of us not liking liver anymore is a big problem.
Indigenous people who ate meat (in other words, all of them) did not limit themselves to lean muscle. They deliberately targeted older animals because older animals have more body fat. (Now you know why predator animals eat elderly grazers.) And they always had at least a few organ meats they considered delicacies, even if they didn't eat all of them.
We've gone so far away from that now, it's no wonder we're sick. And vegetarians don't get a free pass. You're feeling better now because you've dropped a lot of junk out of your diets--any fool can see that. But I have yet to meet a vegan who's done it for fifty years, I have NEVER run across a story about a centenarian who's been vegetarian their whole life and I have noticed there are an awful lot of "natural living" publications that both push vegetarianism and publish articles about allergies, food sensitivities and infertility on a regular basis. I don't think that's a coincidence, and I believe it's only a matter of time before people who eschew animal foods wind up with serious health problems.
The sad part is that you're right about things like factory farming. Some of us meat-eaters are right behind you on that one. Just yesterday Ohio passed Issue 2 which pretty much entrenches factory farming in this state until someone gets up enough support to change the state constitution again. All the PETA people are wringing their hands, but some of us meat-eaters are very unhappy as well and one of the biggest meat-eater support groups, the Weston A. Price Foundation, also opposed the measure.
You make enemies of us by lying about human nutritional needs and calling us fata--es and blaming us for global warming when both vegetarians and conscientious meat-eaters have concern for human health and welfare, and some meat-eaters, gasp, even care about the planet.
Beck's right that schools are a hotbed of indoctrination. That was the whole point for setting them up. Children are quite capable of learning all on their own, although they learn best with some adult guidance, so the only good reason for forcing schooling is to turn out standardized minds that support the state, unearned authority, unfettered capitalism and out-of-control consumerism. Beck would be appalled to hear me say that, but I'm saying it anyway, and lots of people--conservatives and liberals--agree with me. This diet thing is one reason I am homeschooling my daughter, in fact. I won't allow strangers to lie to her about what foods are best for her. Period.
continued...
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» *grumbles about 4000-character limit*
Posted by: dseilhan
Comments are closed-
Posted by: techcafe on Nov 13, 2009 8:22 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: jreal on Oct 30, 2009 1:13 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can someone please remove this whole Post.
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» RE: Watch Out, the Above Link might be a Virus
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Watch Out, the Above Link might be a Virus
Posted by: Longdream
Comments are closed-
Posted by: MMarauder on Oct 30, 2009 4:25 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: peterjkraus on Oct 30, 2009 4:29 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ergo....
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» RE: You are what you eat......
Posted by: Cybershaman
» RE: You are what you eat......
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ThomasJefferson on Oct 30, 2009 5:55 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like most of those right wing tools, they only hate government things that don't concern them.
I would love to see how they would keep the roads repaired if they ever got their way.
morons
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» RE: It's like this...let the Libertarians have their town
Posted by: Changling
» RE: it's like this...
Posted by: KRC
» RE: it's like this...if you have the money you can live
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: bandofotters on Oct 30, 2009 6:06 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can they move it to Fridays out of respect to Catholics who may still practise the tradition or would there be some violation of separation of church & state (whatever that means)?
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» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: redmond
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: ginny
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: Birdland
» 1 out of 21 meals in a week
Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: cosgrovewatt
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: jupiter9
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: penina
» RE: Nothing wrong here? Reduce meat intake by 90%
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: jinglebts
» Who said anything about "only" fruits and vegies?
Posted by: LightningJoe
» I bet they won't have Cokeless Mondays
Posted by: Beck
» RE: You can take any action and speculate what might happen if extended.
Posted by: Plexius2
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: Rwaggs81
» RE: Nothing wrong here?
Posted by: penina
» Nothing to do with you, think of the animal victims and our childrens future
Posted by: TomOfMaine
» RE: Nothing to do with you, think of the animal victims and our childrens future
Posted by: penina
» RE: Nothing to do with you, think of the animal victims and our childrens future
Posted by: LightningJoe
» The right to live?
Posted by: penina
» Beer is not a necessity either
Posted by: penina
» Really...can you be MORE extreme?
Posted by: cyungbluth
» extreme?
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: freshlemon on Oct 30, 2009 6:21 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since when does eating healthy food without meat equal indoctrination? Indoctrination to what? Healthy eating?
Eating meat is the "manly" way I guess for a simpering coward like him. It will take a lot more than eating meat for old pasty face to be manly. I,for one,would like to see him eat a lot of crow.
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» RE: Indoctrination to what? Healthy eating? Green living.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Drama Queen Beck--his manly Mormon way
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Drama Queen Beck
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Drama Queen Beck-You too KRC
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Drama Queen Beck-You too KRC
Posted by: KRC
» RE: In a depression how is that working for you?
Posted by: Changling
» test scores?
Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: test scores?
Posted by: KRC
» RE: test scores?
Posted by: freshlemon
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ebishirl on Oct 30, 2009 6:48 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In fact, a report released just this week found that climate inaction will lead to dramatically higher food prices in the UK, largely because environmental stresses will lead to reduced yields of staple food crops like wheat and rice. It warns that Britons could be paying £6.50 for a loaf of bread and £18 for a pint of beer by the year 2030.
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» It might change more than that.
Posted by: Beck
» RE: It will change more than that. See it Beck?
Posted by: Changling
» Think about it
Posted by: penina
» RE: Think about it more carefully
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Think about it more carefully
Posted by: penina
» RE: Then your fine. The economy will do it for us
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Then your fine. The economy will do it for us
Posted by: penina
» RE: It takes a 10=1 ratio for meat from veggies, vegg 1=1
Posted by: Changling
» You make no sense
Posted by: penina
» RE: You make no sense either
Posted by: Changling
» RE: You make no sense either
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Beck on Oct 30, 2009 7:01 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Actually, I think we could give all those a shot. It is human life on the planet we're talking about. But the point I'm making is why continue choosing things that will not happen? We could choose thermostats at 58. We can't "choose" vegetarianism except for the period of time we're living off our stores of iron and B12 or using supplements to delude ourselves. Go ahead, project impossible scenarios and then claim only that scenario will save us. It's the worst, laziest, most futile attempt possible.
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» Hear Hear
Posted by: luther6
» RE: Hear Hear
Posted by: Beck
» RE: Bull-shit disingeneus argument
Posted by: dogtor
» beck, i know dozens (or hundreds) of vegetarians and vegans
Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» RE: beck, i know dozens (or hundreds) of vegetarians and vegans
Posted by: penina
» Lies and misconceptions
Posted by: WhuThe?!?
» RE: Lies and misconceptions-You are SOOOO Right
Posted by: dcande01
» RE: Lies and misconceptions
Posted by: penina
» RE: There is no "animal flesh fetish"
Posted by: Kathy-B
» RE: There is ONLY endemic antibiotics, hormones and
Posted by: dogtor
» Wednesday is the first "Why Fly Wednesday"
Posted by: Beck
» Use advanced tech
Posted by: BlueTigress
» RE: I've met some of those self described "carnivores"
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 30, 2009 7:02 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The real agenda of this movement is not to give rights to animals, but to take rights from people—to dictate our food, clothing, work, recreation, and whether we will discover new medications or die."
Identical assertions could have been made about the abolition of human slavery, the crusade to end child labor, the liberation of concentration camp prisoners from Nazi physicians or an end to the experimentation upon black humans by white humans.
Marquardt writes that the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) "now encourages vegetarianism, the banning of fur, and the eventual end to all animal research, not just ‘cruel’ animal research." Marquardt writes that the Humane Society now supports vegetarianism.
According to Marquardt, "The typical animal rights activist is a white woman making about $30,000 a year. She is most likely a schoolteacher, nurse, or government worker. She usually has a college degree or even an advanced degree, is in her thirties or forties, and lives in a city."
Marquardt cites studies indicating that animal rights activists tend to identify with liberal causes such as feminism and environmentalism. "Every year," writes the Reverend Andrew Linzey, author of Christianity and the Rights of Animals, "I receive hundreds of anguished letters from Christians who are so distressed by the insensitivity to animals shown by mainstream churches that they have left them or are on the verge of doing so." It is not surprising, therefore, that Marquardt reports that "Most activists share a bias against Western civilization and its Judeo-Christian foundations."
According to Marquardt, the "political clout" of the animal rights movement "is surprisingly bipartisan. But most of the leading politicians working with the animal rights movement are liberal Democrats." Marquardt mentions Senator Barbara Boxer of California, Nevada Congressman Jim Bilbray, Charlie Rose of North Carolina, Tom Lantos and Gerry Studds.
Marquardt admits, however, "some Republicans are animal rightists, too. Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas often supports animal rights causes—except, of course, those pertaining to cattle, a major business in Kansas. Senator Robert Smith of New Hampshire was a founder of the Congressional Friends of Animals. Bob Dornan of California, one of the most conservative House members, is an animal rights advocate—he cosponsored legislation banning the use of animals in testing cosmetics and received a PETA award. And Manhattan Congressman Bill Green promoted legislation that would have shut down over 90 million acres of federal land to hunting, fishing, and trapping."
Marquardt states further that "Although he’s not an elected official, a conservative political figure who, surprisingly, is on the other side is G. Gordon Liddy, author Will and a key figure in the 1972 Watergate uproar. When I went on Liddy’s radio show, he and PETA’s Ingrid Newkirk greeted each other with hugs and kisses and lots of warm words.
"With allies in both political parties and across the ideological spectrum," concludes Marquardt, "the animal rights movement has been able to score some great successes, regardless of which party controls the White House or Capitol Hill."
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» RE: I Smell Big Ag/ Big Beef Shill
Posted by: dogtor
» EAT LESS MEAT
Posted by: dogtor
» I prefer Big Ag over Big Gov
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: moloko velocet on Oct 30, 2009 7:03 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seriously, I've never once watched or listened to any of these idiots...and don't really care one whit, about their agenda-driven propaganda. I wholly dismiss them in the same way I do an irritating commercial. I believe, at this point, that everyone who peruses this site (who is not a wing-nut troll) fully understands these people, and have the same opinion of them.
Why then, do we have at least one article per week decrying the latest glurp spewed by Beck or one of the others? Rehashing (and re-posting) the same invectives every week is perfectly pointless.
Switch it off....and ignore them...you're not going to stop them, and they're not going away.
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» RE: Ignoring them is the wrong way too
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: penina
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: Morell
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: penina
» RE: Alternet is Beck's worst advertising agent
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Alternet is Beck's greatest advertising agent
Posted by: Morell
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Augustus_818 on Oct 30, 2009 7:15 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» What's the differnce between a Libertarian and a Rethuglican?
Posted by: Karlh
» RE: What's the differnce between a Libertarian and a Rethuglican?
Posted by: leftinAK
» Libertarians better than Democrats & Republicans put together
Posted by: Cooltruth
» RE: Libertarians better than Democrats & Republicans put together
Posted by: Morell
» RE: Glenn Beck is NOT, I repeat NOT A LIBERTARIAN
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» Logic is not your strong suit, is it, reverend?
Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: Well then tell Beck that, for he calls himself one!
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: w0x0f on Oct 30, 2009 7:39 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Challenged to create a veggie menu, only one (IIRC) of the chefs managed to remember that even vegetarians need protein, and whipped up a nice lentil dish to go with whatever else was on the plate.
The others created nice veggie dishes that would have served as side dishes on a meat-eaters' menu.
Get a clue, people, and get familiar with the concept of providing protein with creative grain and legume dishes.
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» RE: Meaty mindset
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: As long as you know they aren't complete proteins and have no B12 or usable iron
Posted by: cosgrovewatt
» Sorry, Bud
Posted by: Eric.Arthur.Blair
» Sorry, Eric
Posted by: Kieran076
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ClaudineMe on Oct 30, 2009 8:00 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: KRC
» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: penina
» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: Morell
» Inconvenient lies
Posted by: penina
» RE: An inconvenient truth
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ClaudineMe on Oct 30, 2009 8:08 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: Bushmaster on Oct 30, 2009 8:11 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's scarier than Beck is that there are enough people out there to make him a profitable commodity.
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» RE: Beck
Posted by: KRC
Comments are closed-
Posted by: leftinAK on Oct 30, 2009 8:51 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate Glenn Beck just as much as the next intelligent individual.
But AlterNet!
Please get out of this rut of publishing authors who whine instead of write.
Beck is far from being a libertarian and this "MOOOOOOOM!!! Glen is bothering me again!" bullshit is getting sickening.
REAL JOURNALISM PLEASE
thank you.
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» RE: Glenn Beck is NOT a libertarian
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Glenn Beck: ''Every day that goes by, I'm more and more libertarian.''
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Glenn Beck is NOT a libertarian
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Sister_Lauren on Oct 30, 2009 9:20 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
2002, Brit Diplomat in Uzbekistan Witnessed CIA Rendition Flights, Proof of Torture
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» RE: What is he covering up?
Posted by: zipper696
» Torture
Posted by: penina
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Posted by: nousername on Oct 30, 2009 10:23 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: The_Lazy_Left on Oct 30, 2009 12:03 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you take off your blinders you will see Beck attacks Republicans more than you currently think. This suggests that to some extent Beck isn't a "system man."
Beck challenges people to shake the system up - which is a threat to so called left wing sites like Alternet who prefer a passive sheeple approach.
Notice that Alternet never leads a collective group action? The function of Alternet is too provide a vent for the frustrations of the left, rendering them less potent.
You might counter that Alternet publishes articles which attack corporate America. So what? you think a pin prick goes noticed? The banking industry could care less.
George Soros is the founder and primary financial supporter of Alternet. Do you think he wants you to change the system? Think again.
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» RE: Oh, jesus christ, tin foil hat a little tight today?
Posted by: ETSpoon
» RE: George Soros is the founder and primary financial supporter of Alternet.
Posted by: armorypk
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Changling on Oct 30, 2009 12:21 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Wooohooo! I'm dangerous!
Posted by: penina
» RE: Know nothings running a country is dangerous for everyone
Posted by: Changling
» RE: Know nothings running a country is dangerous for everyone
Posted by: penina
» RE:What world have you been living in?
Posted by: Changling
» RE: What world have you been living in?
Posted by: penina
» RE: What world have you been living in? Really.
Posted by: Changling
» My world was fine up til now
Posted by: penina
» How do you catch wild hogs?
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ETSpoon on Oct 30, 2009 1:52 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's as simple as that.
As far as Steven Levitt being a "climate-change contrarian", that's a misrepresentation and...well it's just plain wrong. Levitt and co-author Stephen Dubner are not global warming deniers, as is the above mentioned wing nut moron Beck.
They are just examining other methods of achieving climatic cooling other than carbon reduction. And their's is a more technological approach than the "let's all eat our veggies and turn out the lights" mantra of the ideologically pure left.
Writes Levitt:"Reducing carbon emissions is not a great way of cooling the Earth in a hurry for two key reasons: (1) even if we cut carbon emissions today, the Earth will continue warming for decades; and (2) reducing carbon emissions is expensive, with a price tag of at least $1 trillion per year.
"A much better approach, we conclude, is geoengineering. The scientific evidence suggests that either the stratoshield or increased oceanic clouds would have a large and immediate impact on cooling the Earth, unlike carbon-emission reductions. The cost of these solutions is trivial compared to the cost of lowering carbon emissions — literally thousands of times cheaper!"
It is a religious-like height of folly to hold on to one and one only solution to global climate change and warming. After all human stupidity knows no boundaries in regards to education, socio-economic class or generation.
So when it comes to solving the greatest dilemma facing the current generations and those of the future, all avenues of research must be explored.
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» RE: Look, Beck's a contrarian of the waste till you drop variety
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Eric.Arthur.Blair on Oct 30, 2009 2:52 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Glenn, my boy, I will personally buy you the biggest steak in town if you promise that it will be you absolutely last meal.
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» Articles Like This Make Beck Look Reasonable
Posted by: ChicagoWay
» RE: I'm Buying! Get to that heart failure sooner
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ChicagoWay on Oct 30, 2009 4:03 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most "normal" people (read voters) view radical Vegans about like they view the average Martian.
Vegan and PETA preachers will spend endless amounts of energy - and ink in AlterNet's case - trying to force their religion on others. They often remind me of the Seventh-Day Adventist that will not leave your door step until you take one of their pamphlets ....or slam the door in their face.
They easily fit right in with the other eco-religionist and Marxist social reformers that have hijacked the environmental movement. They are absolutely determined to re-make society in their own image. In reality all they do is turn “normal” people off – including real environmentalist that want real solutions.
If I have to choose between them and a meat eating Beck - please pass the A-1 Sauce.
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» RE: So you'll choose Beck?
Posted by: ETSpoon
» Responses like yours make articles like this seem necessary
Posted by: Kieran076
» RE: esponses like yours make articles like this seem necessary
Posted by: penina
» RE: Articles Like This Make Beck Look Reasonable
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Articles Like This Make Beck Look Reasonable-to psychos
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Beck on Oct 31, 2009 6:32 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now, sometimes I personally stay home on Saturdays, but today I am not. However, if all of you do, I can remain firm in my idea about this and not feel too guilty, or guilty at all. OR I can do this: do everything I was planning to do on Saturdays on some other day. THAT will work!
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Posted by: mattylou on Oct 31, 2009 6:39 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: fish on friday
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Bring your own if you can't go without for one meal
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford on Oct 31, 2009 7:37 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On meatless mondays...Keep in mind...
There's absolutely nothing stopping those kids from having a full bacon/sausage breakfast before they get to school, and there's nothing stopping them from getting a nice big slab of steak for dinner once they're back home from school.
Glenn Beck is quite literally, protesting going meatless for ONE meal on ONE day of the week.
Why is this bitter, resentful little man still allowed to be on the air?
Oh yeah...
Because it would be an unforgivable crime to put a liberal talk show host on the air instead.
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» RE: Yes, Beck...
Posted by: KRC
» good job, retard...
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford
» RE: good job, retard...
Posted by: KRC
» um, yes...
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Longdream on Oct 31, 2009 7:38 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: KRC
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: Meatless Mondays?
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: charles000 on Oct 31, 2009 6:41 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would offer that this dubious character who fancies himself as some sort of "talent" of the talk show radio universe, really does possess the attributes of over cooked, boiled okra.
Okra, when over cooked, becomes a seedy, slimy, gelatinous mass which is putrid smelling, and looking.
My only reservation in making such an assessment is that this is a bit unfair to the okra . . . but I digress
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Posted by: BlueTigress on Nov 1, 2009 10:08 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Peanut butter sandwiches
Posted by: penina
Comments are closed-
Posted by: smadaj on Nov 1, 2009 10:47 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: He's already cutting back on the snacks i.e. M&M's
Posted by: Changling
Comments are closed-
Posted by: LightningJoe on Nov 2, 2009 5:07 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Such as artificial growth hormones. Such as the built-up doses of antibiotics, meant to control the sicknesses caused by inhumane conditions of confinement. Such as the antibiotic-resistant organisms that are evolved by such practices.
This is what causes cancers; much more than the consumption of the meat itself. Humans live a long time, and our fat bio-concentrates everything we eat that can't be excreted by natural processes. The artificially-manufactured bio-mimitec hormones we ingest with our meat build up in our tissues, and sooner or later induce coding errors in our DNA, leading to cancers.
Supporting the cruel manufacture of meat gives us cancer.
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» RE: Aside from the ethics of it, it's just not very healthy to eat meat these days.
Posted by: penina
» RE: Aside from the ethics of it, it's just not very healthy to eat meat these days.
Posted by: dseilhan
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Posted by: dseilhan on Nov 4, 2009 9:21 AM
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It looks like huge amounts of meat to you, in the same way a bucket of water looks like a lot of water to someone who has recently staggered out of the desert. But really, we could eat a lot more animal foods than we do, and we could eat a lot more varied animal foods than we do. It is argued by those with more sense than PETA that one of the reasons so many of us are malnourished now is that we think organ meats are yucky. There are people who can't turn beta carotene into vitamin A (i.e., diabetics and the hypothyroid, among others), so most of us not liking liver anymore is a big problem.
Indigenous people who ate meat (in other words, all of them) did not limit themselves to lean muscle. They deliberately targeted older animals because older animals have more body fat. (Now you know why predator animals eat elderly grazers.) And they always had at least a few organ meats they considered delicacies, even if they didn't eat all of them.
We've gone so far away from that now, it's no wonder we're sick. And vegetarians don't get a free pass. You're feeling better now because you've dropped a lot of junk out of your diets--any fool can see that. But I have yet to meet a vegan who's done it for fifty years, I have NEVER run across a story about a centenarian who's been vegetarian their whole life and I have noticed there are an awful lot of "natural living" publications that both push vegetarianism and publish articles about allergies, food sensitivities and infertility on a regular basis. I don't think that's a coincidence, and I believe it's only a matter of time before people who eschew animal foods wind up with serious health problems.
The sad part is that you're right about things like factory farming. Some of us meat-eaters are right behind you on that one. Just yesterday Ohio passed Issue 2 which pretty much entrenches factory farming in this state until someone gets up enough support to change the state constitution again. All the PETA people are wringing their hands, but some of us meat-eaters are very unhappy as well and one of the biggest meat-eater support groups, the Weston A. Price Foundation, also opposed the measure.
You make enemies of us by lying about human nutritional needs and calling us fata--es and blaming us for global warming when both vegetarians and conscientious meat-eaters have concern for human health and welfare, and some meat-eaters, gasp, even care about the planet.
Beck's right that schools are a hotbed of indoctrination. That was the whole point for setting them up. Children are quite capable of learning all on their own, although they learn best with some adult guidance, so the only good reason for forcing schooling is to turn out standardized minds that support the state, unearned authority, unfettered capitalism and out-of-control consumerism. Beck would be appalled to hear me say that, but I'm saying it anyway, and lots of people--conservatives and liberals--agree with me. This diet thing is one reason I am homeschooling my daughter, in fact. I won't allow strangers to lie to her about what foods are best for her. Period.
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Posted by: dseilhan
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Posted by: techcafe on Nov 13, 2009 8:22 PM
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