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'Enlightened' food police are just annoying
In my opinion
by Tyler Graf | Opinion editor
PUBLISHED ON 5/1/07 IN Commentary
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And I am unrepentant.
Do not tell me that my omnivore tendencies are unhealthy or morally wrong or Neanderthal-like. Do not tell me that meat is murder. We have been eating meat since time immemorial, and meat holds a long tradition in practically every culture. The belief that we have progressed beyond a need for certain types of food is magnificently condescending.
Still, the food police are on the march. Along with certain trans-fat-laden foods, cities across the nation have banned, or are looking at banning, certain nouveau riche delicacies.
Chicago recently rankled French restaurant owners by banning foie gras in the city's restaurants. Foie gras is a French delicacy of fattened duck or goose liver. It is produced by force feeding, or "gavaging," ducks with corn grain for 10 to 12 days before the animal is eventually slaughtered.
I know what you think: Those poor ducks! Those poor, lamentable water fowl!
A lot of people think that force feeding ducks is excessively cruel - unless, I imagine, the duck is the UO's erstwhile mascot Roboduck. That mechanized monstrosity deserves worse - perhaps a colonic of wasabi and chile paste.
But French cuisine without foie gras simply is not French cuisine. The great leaps in gastronomic greatness performed by the French was made, in large part, at the expense of animals. And the industry remains culturally significant because it is still based on dietary risks - from unpasteurized cheese to unfresh meat.
Food is not simply energy or nourishment; food is culture, whether it's French foie gras or African goat blood. Believing that you are enlightened based on your diet of twigs and leaves is beyond laughable. Regardless, that's often what the food police do. Vegetarians and vegans are paranoid, guilt-ridden people. They adhere to the Victorian belief that everything enjoyable is bad for you. This obsession with food within the veggie community is an ironic, modern-day mortification of the flesh.
Spring Break



Viewing Comments 1 - 4 of 6
Cathy Apgar
posted 5/02/07 @ 12:01 PM PST
"Food is culture." Yep, you said it. Lots of things define a culture- for instance, suicide bombers (Islam), throwing your child off a cliff if his teeth come in first on the bottom instead of the top (Some dumbass tribe in Africa), shaving the heads of the mentally ill as the state-of-the-art treatment (Afghanistan). (Continued…)
Drew Soderberg
posted 5/03/07 @ 9:39 AM PST
What's annoying Cathy is that you choose to compare throwing babies off cliffs with eating duck. Give ME a break
Dorothy
dorothy
posted 5/04/07 @ 12:45 PM PST
Ok,guys,each one to your corner of the ring.Stop fighting for the moment.If you want to eat goose liver,and ham,that's your choice;if someone wants to eat veggie,it's up to them. (Continued…)
Dorothy
dorothy
posted 5/04/07 @ 12:48 PM PST
Hey,watch it,some of like asparagus AND duck.(usually on the same menu.)
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