You are an ass Mr Ball. This is only a finding that American diets and
standards are not conducive to a diet that is for those that adapt to it
through time. In Africa some tribes make beer by chewing and spitting a
moist root. Do you think that it is suitable for sale in the US? You are
a stupid asshole to act like this is some kind of finding that "vegan"
diet is bad. First time I ate vegemite I spit it out so that I would not
vomit. Do you think that you could tell the Ausi's and New Zealanders
their diet is invalid? You are joke Ball. Go get a life! You are ****ing
dumb ass that is reaching for straws in an argument that you could care
less about. You here only as an excuse to be an abusive bully coward
punk!
Jonathan Ball wrote:
> A Food Fight Over a Fungus
>
> By Rosie Mestel, Times Staff Writer
>
> STOKESLEY, England — Refrigerated trucks trundle down
> the pretty country lanes laden with pale, doughy masses
> of fungus — 32 tons or more a day.
>
> "Pure mycoprotein — good enough to eat, won't taste of
> anything, very bland," declares manufacturing manager
> Pete Willis, tearing off a golf-ball-sized sample from
> a 2,000-pound glob.
>
> Workers in white boots shepherd the fungal paste
> through a sea of vats and clanking machines that mix,
> press, slice and dice the raw dough.
>
> What comes out at the end is a matter of perspective —
> luscious artificial meat patties that taste just like
> moist chicken, or dangerous vat-grown "vomit-burgers"
> that are sickening consumers from coast to coast.
>
> The product is Quorn, a fungus-based meat substitute
> that millions of Europeans have eaten for years. It
> entered the U.S. market in 2002 to rave reviews by
> consumers, but was quickly met with a dogged anti-Quorn
> campaign by an influential consumer group, the Center
> for Science in the Public Interest.
>
> Michael Jacobson, the CSPI's executive director, claims
> that Quorn, which he derisively terms an "odious"
> "mold"-based product, makes people ill — and he wants
> every last nugget expunged from American soil.
>
> He has started a "Quorn complaints" website, published
> anti-Quorn letters in medical journals and petitioned
> the Food and Drug Administration to yank the product,
> which he likes to note is made by a former subsidiary
> of the "pharmaceutical juggernaut AstraZeneca."
>
> "It seems in the FDA's eyes severe vomiting, diarrhea
> and anaphylactic reactions do not constitute harm,"
> Jacobson said. "I think that's pathetic."
>
> more at http://tinyurl.com/2yev2 (requires registration)
>
> This should be good:* the "vegan" foodies just
> LOOOOOOOVE the Center for (pseudo)Science in the Public
> Interest when it says something they like; wonder how
> they're react now?