Posted on 02/23/2025 7:09:22 PM PST by johnnygeneric
Yeah, I see. i was more making a statement that it seems like the solution in the US is to kill the healthy chickens. I suspect this is government policy but I don’t know if our chickens are vaccinated?
CLEVER
The FDA is set to approve a specific H1N5 vaccine for livestock. We should just use the same one that Mexico uses it obviously works and it’s a traditional vaccine not experimental MRNA. So the Qtards won’t have a melt down about Bill Gates and the lizard people and Soros et al.
I checked yesterday and a dozen are going for 55 pesos and I didn’t see a 30-pack. It’s Mexico…
Eggs last longer if they are not washed.
They last even longer if they are flipped over every so often when they are in storage.
The price of eggs in all the markets in my area is far more than $4 a dozen.
The lowest price eggs in Walmart was $5.77 a dozen a couple days ago.
I haven’t seen them lower than that anywhere else.
Probably because lobbyists didn't pay off the local politicians to force the local farmers to kill off their chickens to drive supply down and prices up.
Was at Costco today and saw them at 8 dollars for 24. Cage free and organic a bit higher.
I buy farm eggs for 5.99 at a local liquor store
The owner
Btw
Free range and organic means nothing
Commercial eggs have to declare pasture raised to mean anything
All eggs are organic and any commercial house with a box run out behind the track is “free range”
Eggzactly! Smart man.
The “cage-free” eggs are from hens who can go outside (if they dare) into a tiny fenced-in mud-bottomed area where they can peck at each other. (Chickens can be so mean, especially in confined spaces!) Hardly humane, and their eggs are no more nutritious than the ones from caged hens.
Pastured eggs are the tastiest and most nutritious, nice deep orange yolks, and can deliver the precious K2 the other eggs lack. Bonus: happy hens living like chickens should, chowing down on bugs and grass seeds and such instead of the avian equivalent of Soylent Green.
I grew up with the Adams family in Mississippi
https://www.wattagnet.com/egg/article/15530657/fred-adams-jr-founder-of-cal-maine-foods-dies-at-88-wattagnet
Thanks
I notice from various posts, including yours, that there does seem to be some noticeable regional differences in egg prices.
Perhaps more variation than usual.
Cool! No wonder you are an eggspert! (Yeah, corny, but I could not resist.)
Wit and laughter are two important fixtures of humanity
Intelligence …a sign of it
Coping as in mechanism
My Colombian Skidmore grad paramour who taught at Barnard when we played house in Manhattan three years used to scorn how we southern males who would laugh and tease when recounting near death experiences or sadness tragic stuff from our exploits in third world conflict areas
She just didn’t get it
Would she prefer we ball our eyes out?
I sobbed once as a grown man when my Rottie Becket got kilt by a car one night
My daily companion 25/7 for six years went all over the lower 48 with me
His grandson is in the car with me right now
Anyhow my crying in the front veranda holding the poor fellow greatly disturbed Rib and out five kids
Women wanting men to show emotion more is a canard
Her Miss Ivy League PhD idea of coping was kvetching and analysis
Today it’d be lexapro
Still a kind hearted very bright blonde
Not bashing her
I was fond of her once
But humour and especially wit the drier the better I keenly appreciate
Columbia university
Not Colombian
Though a fair number of them too lol
Christina Sanchez from Norte de Santander
Another story down the road you get bored
I like girls obviously even though yall are a challenge lol
“Vivé la diference”
French get some things right
Wine Sexes and Food and Castles lol
They’re cheap the world over. Only our country is killing off entire chicken flocks based on bogus PCR tests. (Not that chickens don’t sometimes get sick and die, especially in the conditions that they are often raised these days.)
It’s like that well-worn quote from the Jimmy Buffet song: “If we couldn’t laugh we would all go insane.” It’s the motto of psychologically healthy people in war zones and dangerous third-world countries. I guess it’s hard for those who haven’t been there to understand.
It’s even harder for them to understand the “black humor” — it’s really just a way of expressing anger and horror — and, yes, coping with it — when surrounded by death and destruction and senseless cruelty. It’s the healthy people, the ones with good caring hearts, who engage in it. It’s the ones who don’t you have to worry about: they’re either psychopaths or they kill themselves as soon as they get home. It must seem backwards to those who have not experienced such scenes, lived in them day after day.
Every time I got shot at, it turned out to be seriously funny. Really it did. I’m sure I’ve never been in situations as scary as yours, though — yours would probably have curled my hair and turned me to jelly (now there’s a picture: a jellyfish with a curly mop).
I’m so sorry about your dog. I’ve cried my eyes out over more than one dog I’ve lost. It’s wonderful you have his grandson! I wish I had a grandson of my beloved Newfie mix. He was one amazing dog. as I’m sure your Rottie was. Yes, Real Men cry over their dogs when they die.
It speaks well of you that you speak well of your wife and even your exes. It’s the sign the sign of a Real Man.
I love humor, especially the dry kind, too — but I must admit my last silliness was really corny lol.
Yes, vive la différence! I don’t know why the stupid feminists insist we’re all the same except for our plumbing. We most assuredly are not! And it’s a good thing. Men and women find each other confusing and mysterious, but who isn’t fascinated by a good mystery? Think how boring it would be if we really were the same aside from plumbing?
Yes, the French do get some things very right: food, wine, architecture, romance, cafe society. I love France and the French when they stay home. Abroad, they can be quite dreadful.
Anyway, it’s nice to see a man who likes women on FR (we all know what some here are like).
Me, I really like men. At this stage of my life, though, I confess I’m well and totally done with the romantic aspect, not because I’m bitter or hate men, but because it’s just worked out that way. I joke that “at my age, they’re all looking for a nurse or a purse, and I’ve got to guard what’s left in my purse and worn out with playing nurse” (after caring for my elderly parents).
No, I don’t really think that’s all men in my age group want, but there’s a bit of truth there. I treasure my male friends and relatives, and my adopted brothers and nephews. I’d just like to enjoy the rest of my life adoring my friends and relatives, both male and female, while keeping my autonomy at this point, free of messy entaglements. I guess it’s selfish in a way, but the opposite of selfish in another. It feels both free and grounded and secure at the same time. Hard to explain. Anyway, I’m grateful for my late husband in many ways, also grateful I get a nicer SS payment thanks to him that helps to allow me this combination of freedom and security.
“I sobbed once as a grown man when my Rottie Becket got kilt by a car one night.”
Losing a favorite pet is different. It would move me. Other than that I’m stoic to a degree that even I find alarming. Although Sibelius’ Valse Triste and Barber’s Adagio for Strings might pierce my indifference for a few minutes.
I forgot
DUCK EGGS ROCK!
if u can find em
$$$
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