Atheists & Agnostics
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This message was self-deleted by its author (Pacifist Patriot) on Mon Feb 5, 2018, 02:17 PM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.
cleanhippie
(19,705 posts)Ever listened to a Sunday Sermon at a church?
Response to cleanhippie (Reply #1)
Pacifist Patriot This message was self-deleted by its author.
cleanhippie
(19,705 posts)Now the gullible will likely disagree...
AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)and it's all meant to separate you from your wealth, at least a little bit at a time.
skepticscott
(13,029 posts)of why it's not harmless for people to believe shit that isn't true, blithely ignored by the defenders of religion and "faith".
AlbertCat
(17,505 posts)Enter the GOP.....
Response to AlbertCat (Reply #6)
Pacifist Patriot This message was self-deleted by its author.
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)I expected it to be more entertaining than informative, but I was wrong. Interesting.
But speaking of entertainment, it wasn't totally lacking of that either.
You're constantly "detoxing" just by living. Your kidneys and liver take care of cleaning out unnecessary things in the body fairly efficiently on their own. Proof? The toilet paper industry.
Response to Curmudgeoness (Reply #8)
Pacifist Patriot This message was self-deleted by its author.
AtheistCrusader
(33,982 posts)"That's not how it works. That's not how any of this works."
BlueJazz
(25,348 posts)Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)beam me up scottie
(57,349 posts)From Slate:
I couldnt believe there was beavers ass in my vanilla ice cream, coal tar in my mac and cheese, yoga mat and shoe rubber in my bread, says Vani Hari, also known as the Food Babe. Thats why she started blogging about food additives, she explains in the introduction to her new book, The Food Babe Way. I cant believe it either. But that would be because none of it is true.
There is no coal tar in mac and cheese, and there never was, even before Hari led her Food Baby army on a crusade to get Kraft to remove tartrazine, a yellow dye, from its products. Bread does not contain crumbled-up pieces of yoga mat and shoe rubber. And there really isnt any beavers ass in your ice cream cone, though its the Food Babe way to tell you there is at every turn. I counted more than 60 references to beaver secretions on her blog, and it appears as No. 10 on her books list of The Sickening 15.
Hari tirelessly reminds her blog readers that the next time they take licks of vanilla ice cream or spoonfuls of strawberry oatmeal, theres a chance youll be swirling secretions from a beavers anal glands around in your mouth. It surely drives traffic: Tell me you wouldnt click on a link to Do You Eat Beaver Butt? She is referring to castoreum, which is indeed extracted from a pair of sacs found on the rear end of a beaver, though not from the anal glands. Castoreum has been used in unguents and medicines for more than 2,000 years, but the Food Babe was appalled to discover the Food and Drug Administration considers castoreum to be not gross but GRASgenerally recognized as safe for both food and pharmaceutical uses.
While in low concentrations castoreum reputedly tastes of vanilla with a hint of raspberry, Ill admit Ive never tasted it. Not because Im particularly disgusted by the sourceI eat animal products and am inordinately fond of the fermented genitalia of Theobroma cacaobut because of its scarcity and cost. Enough castoreum extract to replace the vanilla in a half-gallon of ice cream would cost $120. Worldwide, less than 500 pounds of castoreum is harvested annually from beaver pelts, compared with the more than 20 million pounds of vanilla extracted from the ovaries of Vanilla planifolia orchids each year. Perfumers, not ice cream manufacturers, are the real market for castoreum. So while beaver secretions just might be in the expensive perfume you dabbed on your pulse points or in the aftershave you splashed on your facedid you just touch that with your hands, yuckrest easy, there is no chance that the pint of ice cream you picked up at the store contains it. Not at the price you paid for it.
...
The Food Babe is a business, just like Kraft, and one that is far less grounded in sciencesee her infamous microwave post and the now disappeared post about the airlines craftily adding nitrogen to the air in planes. Frankly, if Hari were really so worried about animal butts in the food supply, I imagine she wouldnt have enjoyed this meal quite so muchwhen you eat shrimp tails, you are eating a shrimps anus, secretions and all. But beaver butt brings in advertising dollars and sells books, and that keeps the Food Babe in business.
That last paragraph points out the staggering hypocrisy of woos everywhere: the Woo Industry makes millions of dollars lying to consumers.
progressoid
(50,757 posts)When I'm done eating, I wash up with some Beaver Butt Soap.
http://www.goatmountainsoap.com/beaver_butt.html
beam me up scottie
(57,349 posts)Goat Island, Goat Mountain, is there anything those damn goats haven't claimed as their own?
(there is no dam beaver in this soap)
Manifestor_of_Light
(21,046 posts)So many clowns, it looks like a Republican primary.
Then there's Boudreaux's Butt Paste for diaper rash.
Promethean
(468 posts)is people are too separated from the scientific process. Ask a random person if they even know about the scientific peer review process and odds are they don't. Scientific advancements have been basically declared from on high for so long to the average person that they can't tell the difference between someone claiming something authoritatively and someone that actually knows something based on the research.