Skip to main content

You can never trust a blogger.........

I'm already breaking my promise regarding only posting useless self-adsorbed crap. Come on you really didn't trust a blogger did you?

This morning I told Hershey's to Kiss, to kiss-off.
Hershey uses GM Sugar in their Kiss candy.

If you live in a cave and don't know what GM is let me suggest you read a newspaper now and then, and I will try to explain in words a 8 year old can understand.

OK Bubba, GM does not stand for General Motors.

GM means GENETICALLY MODIFIED, as in some horn rimmed glass wearing guy working in the laboratory (for this subject it's pronounced "la-boar-ah-tory) rearranging the DNA of a sugar beet so that it can be sprayed with Monsanto’s toxic weed killer "Roundup" and not die along with the weeds.

Now back to the horn rimmed glass wearing guy working in the laboratory (remember to pronounce it "la-boar-ah-tory, it sounds so much creepier that way) his job is to figure out how to kill weeds and save the beet.
His job does not include figuring out what effect the weed killer residue in the beet will have on all the sugar made from the beet.
Neither is it his job to examine what effect GM Roundup laced sugar will have on the American public when they eat it.

The scary part is the GM food ingredients do NOT appear on the label , you don't know what kind of crap they are feeding you. The label will say "sugar" or "corn syrup". It will not say genetically modified with residues of glyphosate (the active ingredient in Roundup).

OK Bubba, in words you can understand, glyphosate is the same thing as stump killer. Do you really want to sprinkle that in your biscuits and gravy? Seriously, there is sugar in sausage and sugar in biscuits.
Think about it next time you're taking a dump after breakfast.


Tell Hershey to Kiss Off

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Marc Chagall, Painter of Symbols

I was recently shopping calendars at Barns & Noble when I came across a Marc Chagall edition. I fell in love with his symbolism, which I have been researching the past few days. His frequently repeated subject matter was drawn from Jewish life and folklore; he was particularly fond of flower and animal symbols Use of symbolism I gleaned from the web, in most cases I've tried to add my own thoughts. I'm not an art historian so my thoughts are just my thoughts. Personally the notion that the horses in Chagall's paintings only represent freedom seems absurd. Horses were work animals, they plowed fields and pulled carriages and wagons. Nearly every painting with a horse it seems to portray strength, support, commitment and loyality. In one painting the horse is painted directly on the crotch of the male subject... duh, looks like sexual prouness to me. Cow : Substainer of life. Another notion is that Chagall is striving to unite the bestial and the rational, the spontan...

Making Malt Vinegar ©

Malt vinegar is made from malted barley. Rather than malt my own barley, which I do not know how to do, I decided to use a bottle of Guinness and 1 cup of Braggs Apple cider vinegar. Braggs is a living vinegar and as the starter should do the trick fairly quick and easy. I began my vinegar on February 18th by pouring the Guinness and Braggs into a small crock and placing it in the pantry. I covered the crock with a cotton fabric to keep dust and such out and let air, wild yeast and such in. By February 24 a short 5 days later I checked my concoction and found a mother was forming! The vinegar mother was not a solid layer, but a bunch of small globules floating on the top... so I guess I didn't have a mother, I had a litter *L* It was only a couple more days before I had a healthy mother completely covering the top of my Malt Vinegar. Now some people say when the mother sinks the vinegar is finished. When brewing other vinegars I never went by the "sink theory", I go by t...
I Will Always Remember Puerto Rico The Puerto Rico effect begins and ends with startling blue water and swaying coconut palms, falling asleep to jungle sounds, and rain suddenly bursting through windows and open doors sounding like a thousand horses in full gallop. Puerto Rico is a green enormous wet. Even without an inkling of Spanish I believe people would guess that the name Puerto Rico means Port Something; the literal translation is Rich Port due to the plentiful gold found in the rivers that empty into the sea. From its tropical beauty to its friendly atmosphere, Puerto Rico is rich in so many ways. To me the place is more than a happy memory and more than its name. Puerto Rico is equal to the feeling it produces. Puerto Rico is easy. It’s easy on the spirit. It is easy on being. There are places in everyone’s life that they will never forget. Then there are Puerto Rico places where the history of our experience is so extraordinary the memory of that place becomes a tote...