Posted on 08/26/2024 7:30:07 PM PDT by davikkm
No wonder Mexicans are leaving Mexico
Bugs are largely not Kosher.
A little bit of bug eating has been around in the U.S. for generations, but as a novelty, for example chocolate covered.
Where the hell are the envirowackoes? Eating all the bugs is going to screw up the “ecology”. We’ll be stealing food that belongs to the birds and stuff.
Mmm, love me some maggots and crickets. Not. I had a ribeye for dinner.
I’m eyeing a porterhouse on the grill for this weekend. But would also like a cowboy ribeye.
It’s not a bug. It’s a feature.
When I see the rich people demanding to eat bugs every day, I’ll know they’re not just saying easy words like the hypocrites they are.
Honey?
Regards,
Bugs are full of parasites
Economics 101: find cheapest or even free raw materials (like bugs). Exploit the raw materials, get money.
And that’s largely what this is about. Money. It doesn’t have to be this way.
Those pictures are more appealing than the piles of dead insects for sale I saw in a local Bangkok market in 2008.
When I was riding, I discovered windshields. The biggest benefit, after fatigue prevention, was that my riding jacket and helmet stayed much cleaner.
Years ago I found out that you are eating bugs. The FDA allows so many bug parts to be in the food you eat. They can’t get them all out. Common wheat has weevil eggs in it that can’t be removed all the time.
In 1969 Utapao AFB we would catch rice bugs attracted to the big lights used at night to illuminate the aircraft.
The locals would pay a “Baht” (5 cents) for each female bug. They did not want the males and could tell by the smell what they were.
From what others said (I did not see it) they would bite off the end of the bug and suck out the rice in the bug.
Only bugs I ever ate was in the chow hall at Beale AFB in California. They had a nice display of salads and condiments which were really good with little bumps on them. Then one day I realized those “bumps” were gnats all over the food. I suddenly quit eating salads as a result.
American Indians used to chow down on various bugs. When whining about “frybread” I often suggest they return to an original stone age diet. They don’t like that.
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/history-of-eating-bugs-america
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