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Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
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Excerpts from 'Eternel Treblinka; Our Treatment of Animals and the
Holocaust', by Charles Patterson (from http://www.powerfulbook.com/excerpts.html) Sumer, one of the earliest and most powerful of the ancient Mesopotamian city-states, managed its slaves the same way it managed its livestock. The Sumerians castrated the males and put them to work like domesticated animals, and they put the females in work and breeding camps. The Sumerian word for castrated slave boys -- amar-kud -- is the same word the Sumerians used for young castrated donkeys, horses, and oxen. -- from Chapter 1 Henry Ford, who was so impressed by the efficient way meat packers killed animals in Chicago, made his own special contribution to the slaughter of people in Europe. Not only did he develop the assembly-line method the Germans used to kill Jews, but he launched a vicious anti-Semitic campaign that helped the Holocaust happen. -- from Chapter 3 Although the purpose of the German killing centers was the extermination of human beings, they operated in the larger context of society's exploitation and slaughter of animals, which to some extent they mirrored. The Germans did not stop slaughtering animals when they took up slaughtering people. Auschwitz, which its commandant Rudolf Hoss called "the largest human slaughterhouse that history had ever known," had its own slaughterhouse and butcher's shop. The other death camps likewise kept their personnel well supplied with animal flesh. Sobibor had a cow shed, pigpen, and henhouse, which were next to the entrance to the tube that took Jews to the gas chambers, while Treblinka had a stable, pigpen, and henhouse located near the camp barracks of the Ukrainian auxiliaries. -- from Chapter 5 When young [Isaac Bashevis] Singer set out to become a writer in Warsaw, he purchased an account book in which he jotted down sketches, sayings, and ideas for stories, novels, and plays. One of his entries was about the Ten Commandments and how they might be improved. He wrote that the Sixth Commandment -- "Thou shalt not kill" -- should apply to all God's creatures, not just human beings. As if to emphasize this point, Singer added an Eleventh Commandment: "Do not kill or exploit the animal. Don't eat its flesh, don't flail its hide, don't force it to do things against its nature." -- from Chapter 7 That's when the first of three things happened to him that changed his life. He and his wife went on a short trip to Mexico where they decided to do what one is supposed to do there -- watch a bullfight. "When the first animal was killed, I broke down -- emotionally and physically. I had never witnessed such unabashed animal torture before and simply couldn't believe what I saw -- the suffering of the desperate animal and the blood lust of the cheering crowd! They couldn't wait to see the next animal brought in and tortured. I left, and the memory of what I saw haunted me for several years." -- from Chapter 8 |
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Jack Curry wrote:
Google and yahoo are going to run out of addresses. BOB |
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