Sunday, April 26, 2020

Digest for rec.food.cooking@googlegroups.com - 25 updates in 6 topics

Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 08:23AM -0700

On Sunday, April 26, 2020 at 11:09:21 AM UTC-4, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> > had a little money. I got my first prescription for the pill from the
> > University of Michigan Student Health Service.
 
> In the 60s it was not like that, especially for unmarried women.
 
I get that. I was pointing out that it's not the 60s anymore. Birth
control is pretty easy to get, if you have the will to do so.
 
 
> > Cindy Hamilton
 
> US Government. I think even the Catholic church is finally looking away
> now and accepting reality.
 
The U.S. government bows its head to the evangelical Right.
 
If I had my way, Welfare recipients would be sterilized. Or at least
forced to use the subcutaneous implant.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Apr 26 11:31AM -0400

On 2020-04-26 11:23 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> The U.S. government bows its head to the evangelical Right.
 
> If I had my way, Welfare recipients would be sterilized. Or at least
> forced to use the subcutaneous implant.
 
You know that a lot of people will take a very dim view of that
attitude. I don't know what we are supposed to do about people who
continue to procreate when they can't even look after themselves. You
can't let the children suffer for the bad judgement of their parents.
That leaves the rest of us to pay for he support of those kids in
addition to our own, and I don't think that's fair to us.
Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>: Apr 26 11:44AM -0400

>> had a little money. I got my first prescription for the pill from the
>> University of Michigan Student Health Service.
 
>In the 60s it was not like that, especially for unmarried women.
 
Throughout the '60s condoms were kept out of sight behind the
pharmacist's counter and married or not one pretty much needed a
doctor's prescription or have an older adult buy them... at 18 years
old (the legal age then) it was a lot easier to buy booze. At that
time the most common method for teens to obtain condoms was to steal
them from their parent's stash... at that time parents were very
reluctant to supply their teenagers with condoms.
 
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Apr 26 11:52AM -0400

On 2020-04-26 11:09 a.m., Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On 4/26/2020 10:53 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
anything, have a baby you cannot afford and we'll give you more money.
 
>> Cindy Hamilton
 
> US Government.  I think even the Catholic church is finally looking away
> now and accepting reality.
 
 
Maybe they are finally recognizing that Catholics are having just as
many abortions anyone else, maybe even more. According to an article in
America The Jesuit Review, 22% of American women identify as being
Catholic, and 22% of women having abortions identify as Catholic. It
also noted that 27% of American women are Protestant but account for
only 13% of abortions.
 
I remember being told years ago that Catholics had so many abortions
because they were discouraged from using contraception. A sin is a sin,
and they could sin every day taking the Pill or they could sin once and
have an abortion. I am not sure I buy that, but there is no telling how
a religious mind works.
 
I had a friend uho had divorced once, remarried, split up with his wife
and then living with a woman. She had been named as the corespondent in
the second divorce and was really upset about that because she was
Catholic. I couldn't figure that one out. I thought that if she was
Catholic enough to be upset about being names in the divorce proceedings
she should have figured that God would already know.
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Apr 26 10:27AM -0600

On 2020-04-26 9:09 a.m., Ed Pawlowski wrote:
>> had a little money.  I got my first prescription for the pill from the
>> University of Michigan Student Health Service.
 
> In the 60s it was not like that, especially for unmarried women.
 
When I was at uni, it was extremely difficult for women to get abortions
(unless they were wealthy, of course).
The chief Dr in the student health service would "diagnose" painful
periods and the girls would then have a D&C.
graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Apr 26 10:28AM -0600

On 2020-04-26 9:23 a.m., Cindy Hamilton wrote:
 
> If I had my way, Welfare recipients would be sterilized. Or at least
> forced to use the subcutaneous implant.
 
> Cindy Hamilton
 
Wouldn't it be easier to force them to pick cotton?
Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Apr 26 12:44PM -0400

On 4/26/2020 11:52 AM, Dave Smith wrote:
> and they could sin every day taking the Pill or they could sin once and
> have an abortion.  I am not sure I buy that, but there is no telling how
> a religious mind works.
 
There are a lot of biological misconceptions too. Most people think a
baby takes nine months. We were young teenagers when my friend Bobby's
sister was married and had a baby at 7 months. Turns out, a lot of
times the first baby is premature. His mother told us that and of
course, she would know.
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 09:54AM -0700

On Sunday, April 26, 2020 at 11:32:00 AM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> > forced to use the subcutaneous implant.
 
> You know that a lot of people will take a very dim view of that
> attitude.
 
I'm pretty sure the word "genocide" would be used.
 
> can't let the children suffer for the bad judgement of their parents.
> That leaves the rest of us to pay for he support of those kids in
> addition to our own, and I don't think that's fair to us.
 
It's not fair to anybody. Not to the kids, not to the parents (not really,
because they don't ever learn that actions have consequences), and not
to us.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 09:57AM -0700

On Sunday, April 26, 2020 at 11:44:34 AM UTC-4, Sheldon wrote:
> time the most common method for teens to obtain condoms was to steal
> them from their parent's stash... at that time parents were very
> reluctant to supply their teenagers with condoms.
 
Jesus H. Christ, people. The 60s were FIFTY years ago. It's a whole
'nother ballgame.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Cindy Hamilton <angelicapaganelli@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 09:59AM -0700

On Sunday, April 26, 2020 at 12:28:36 PM UTC-4, graham wrote:
> > forced to use the subcutaneous implant.
 
> > Cindy Hamilton
 
> Wouldn't it be easier to force them to pick cotton?
 
They'd be free to decline Welfare and do whatever they want about
their reproductive activities.
 
It's moot, really. Just a thought experiment.
 
Cindy Hamilton
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: Apr 26 01:31PM -0300

On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 11:02:35 -0400, Sheldon Martin <penmart01@aol.com>
wrote:
 
 
>>Just be glad that's all you are in the National news for - we wish in
>>NS.
 
>NS?
 
Nova Scotia - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJQdvb0rgls
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Apr 26 10:46AM -0600

On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 08:01:51 -0400, songbird <songbird@anthive.com>
wrote:
 
>of us live with others so we can't quarantine as we'd like.
>it's a farkin crap shoot. good luck.
 
> songbird
 
Dave's example is that of a privileged man who has made rules, never
followed them. Old folks, at least around here, follow all the rules.
Janet US
Dave Smith <adavid.smith@sympatico.ca>: Apr 26 12:59PM -0400

On 2020-04-26 12:46 p.m., U.S. Janet B. wrote:
 
>> songbird
 
> Dave's example is that of a privileged man who has made rules, never
> followed them. Old folks, at least around here, follow all the rules.
 
 
That is the impression that a lot of the people have, and he has been
judged severely the people in this area. The people who are willing to
crucify him now were his customers. There are only two grocery stores in
town and everyone knows him. Until this story came out I doubt that you
would have heard a bad word about him. He was involved in a lot of
community events. He supported charities and fundraising events. He had
a smile and a greeting for everyone who came into the store. When he
ran for town council he was a shoo-in. Now..... he dare not show his face.
coltwvu@gmail.com: Apr 26 08:31AM -0700

My boxer lived to be 13.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 03:31PM


> I also planted more lettuce types. I don't know how the heck he
> figured out it was better than grass like my last 2 dogs, but he did
> and I can't raise a container garden set above his reach (grin).
 
We have a 120# mastiff breed that is tall for his kind. He does much better
on dry dog foods specifically for large breeds; better yet one formulated
for hip and joint health. We always add extra things, because he rules the
house. Rice and eggs are a favorite, as well as meat scraps, fish skin, and
peas. He LOVES peas. And pizza. Watch your plate. Cheese is a daily treat.
We keep string cheese on hand. I'll occasionally cook up big batches of
food to freeze in individual portions. I stick to a ratio of 50% grain, 25%
protein, 25% vegetable. I'll buy the cheapest, fattiest hamburger for this
usually, with a 23-27% fat content. I know you are familiar with cooking
for dogs, however. I like to boil up a bunch of eggs, smash them up, and
keep in a container in the fridge so I can just add a quarter cup or so at
mealtime. It's nice and easy. Raising his food and water bowls up to
prevent bloat is debatable. Some studies show it contributes to it, and
others prove it doesn't. We raise ours simply to alleviate the strain on
joints from bending so much (our dog has a torn ACL). I'm not sure exactly
how high a GD would need, but at least a foot. You can google for height
recommendations based on dog height. You should also feed large dogs
smaller meals more frequently rather than 2 large meals a day to help
prevent bloat. And if he eats fast, absolutely buy a slow feeder for him.
Last but not least, feed him separate from all other dogs. Anxious feeding
increases the risk for bloat.
U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Apr 26 10:58AM -0600

On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:49:40 +0100, Janet <nobody@home.org> wrote:
 
snip
>excercise hard.
 
> Hope some of that is useful
 
> Janet UK.
 
The raised dish feeder is a must for taller dogs. The setup generally
has a side for water as well as food.
Janet US
John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Apr 26 09:35AM -0700

My across the street neighbor Marc is out there with his STINKY Petroleum burning mower mowing his yard, and he's a professor at UMSL!
 
Who else does not see that in 100 years using petroleum to do yard work will be ILLEGAL?
 
United Statesians are SO STUPID!
 
John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and So Much More!
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Apr 26 11:24AM -0400

Bruce wrote:
 
> >> Cindy Hamilton
 
> >We're going to have to agree to disagree.
 
> 2+2=5, right Joan?
 
Nope. 2+2 = 22
Gary <g.majors@att.net>: Apr 26 11:24AM -0400

Bruce wrote:
> During my uni years I never got up before 1PM. If I had classes
> earlier, I didn't go.
 
What time do you get up now, Bruce?
Just wondering.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 03:40PM

> We're only allowed one trip to the store every two weeks and things are
> being rationed. I did get paper towels today but there was a limit of one
> package. So 6 rolls as that was the only kind they had.
 
Interesting. My friend lives just 20 minutes away from Bothell in Edmonds.
They're not restricted from going to the store more often than once every 2
weeks.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 03:56PM

>> every two weeks" rule. That's a lie, and Droolie lies a lot.
 
> Those words came directly from Inslee's mouth. He also told people 65 and up
> not to go out at all. Send somebody else.
 
These are recommendations, not orders.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 04:15PM

> not shopping as often, I was curious as to how long I could last. I
> stopped counting at roughly 50 meals and did not even look in the pantry
> with the pasta, rice, beans, etc.
 
We are weathering the virus lockdowns temporarily down here in Florida. I
stocked up for the three of us plus the dog for what I thought would be
about 2 weeks' worth of meals. It's been 7 weeks now and although I've had
to get more milk, eggs, and fresh produce, we are still using up my
original supply of meat and dry goods. The heat really tempers appetites,
and sitting at home all day means we are nibbling more and hungry for large
meals less. I'm certainly enjoying the extra free time however to
experiment more in the kitchen.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 04:19PM


> The pencils in Bothell always break or get stolen, and the paper
> disintegrates into dust.
 
> Janet UK
 
I heard they only write in disappearing ink.
Lucretia Borgia <lucretiaborgia@fl.it>: Apr 26 01:30PM -0300

On Sun, 26 Apr 2020 10:31:40 -0400, Dave Smith
>show to drop them DD tanks instead of dumping them too far out and most
>of them sank. Americans only accounted for half the force. The British
>and Canadians reached their objective.
 
Then there is my father who rescued Eisenhower for them when his ship
went aground.
Jinx the Minx <jinxminx2@yahoo.com>: Apr 26 04:26PM


> Note: Ferret Day in the UK is May 5.
> Interesting that Queen Elizabeth the first
> had a pet ferret. Very cool of her, imo! :-D
 
They only don't smell to those who live with them and become desensitized
to it. For the rest of us visitors, their scent is unmistakable.
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