my girlfriend and I founded a non-profit organization. we cater events with vegan food. almost all of our raw ingredients we get for free, they're "saved" (as in foodsharing, not as in "containering") from local farmers, supermarkets and so on. stuff that would have otherwise been thrown away. our food is handed out against a donation (pay-what-you-want!). with those donations we keep the organization rolling and help refugees all over europe (another ngo does this directly).
we have successfully had like 40+ events catered, made a few thousand euros, cooked for 400+ people at a time and have up to 25 members now. sadly with us moving and all we will probably have to call it quits, no one is ready to take over and commit his/her time to this cause. still, I had a great time
furthermore I try to mostly buy organic and local produce, eat less meat, I don't have a car and use public transport exclusively, I forced my parents to donate to greenpeace for more than a decade (because muh whales!) and kinda support our local greens.
That makes me want to eat vegan food. I would love to be a vegan but I think it is too difficult in my country and especially when you are on your own as I am. It's more expensive too even though meat substitutes should be cheaper to produce!
I don't binge eat anymore though. Just eat the meat I think is necessary for me.
Fresh produce tends to taste better and theres no additives. It isn't cheap but nor is meat unless you're buying low quality.
Just imagine eating fresh produce several times a day!
I suppose in some Asian countries this might happen, but their diet might be a bit monotonous and therefore lacking in nutrition.
That makes me want to eat vegan food. I would love to be a vegan but I think it is too difficult in my country and especially when you are on your own as I am. It's more expensive too even though meat substitutes should be cheaper to produce!
I don't binge eat anymore though. Just eat the meat I think is necessary for me.
And I pay taxes. Lots of taxes.
I suppose in some Asian countries this might happen, but their diet might be a bit monotonous and therefore lacking in nutrition.
I really hope you're trolling, you couldn't be more wrong..
not all asian diets are healthy though. Chinese eat a lot of fatty food with bad oils and carcinogens. filipinos have lots of fast food (influenced in part of course by the US). modern korean food is often deep fried or has lots of unneeded cheese or grease. many of the junk food products like instant noodles, sweets, chips.. are popular in asian countries and definitely unhealthy. there is just no way to generalize![]()
What I was thinking about was the poorest people.
I have an image of the poorest eating just casava or mostly white rice.
The casava thing is from Africa though. I don't know.
Watch you cholesterol level.![]()
I thought that was old science. All the new studies seem to indicate the cholesterol level in your food doesn't matter. Eating fiber and exercise does, and maintaining healthy weight.
Found one link.
https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_r...cle_4987ca54-6b24-5209-adde-bd93570a403b.html
ut learning that consumption of processed meat causes an additional 34,000 worldwide cancer deaths a year is much more chilling. According to Cancer Research UK, if no one ate processed or red meat in Britain, there would be 8,800 fewer cases of cancer. (That is four times the number of people killed annually on Britain’s roads.)
I think I've lived somewhat selfishly. I do not regularly donate to charity nor do I canvas for any causes. I do regularly vote to raise my own taxes and support a strong social safety net for the entire country, not just 'my side'. It's easy to get mad that my taxes disproportionately go back to the Federal government rather than come back to me through services. Every paycheck some portion of my money goes to build roads and schools in rural Mississippi even though they're representatives voted to remove tax breaks in my state while simultanesouly blocking pretty much every initiative I want the federal government to undertake.Hi everyone, as is often discussed and debated on this forum, there is a lot of ugliness that goes on in the world, whether it's Synagogue shootings, Rohingya genocide, systematic child abuse in Nauru, Catholic Church cover-ups, the destruction of our environment for profit, and on and on. It's overwhelming to think about, which is why many people (though not you esteemed Off-Topicer's) don't and instead we mostly distract ourselves with entertainment media and of course the daily struggles of our own everyday lives. What I am wondering is, what can we really do about it? And I'm not asking rhetorically - for someone (of normal means like most of us here) who wants to contribute a little more on this planet than just consuming and being entertained and providing for themselves and their family, what can they actually do? What actually helps? Is donating to charities worth it? I know places like Charity Intelligence provides some good insight on how far your dollar goes with some organizations, but I would love to hear your thoughts on the value they provide. And finally, to help give me some ideas of how I can start leading a less selfish life, if you would like I would love to hear some of what you guys do to make that tiny bit of difference we can. I'm trying not to let cynicism turn me into a misanthrope!
That's your good deed for that month. Good work!Oooh one time though I totally saved a town from burning down. I drove down the main street of tiny Milstadt, Illinois on a blistering summer day when I spotted a small fire at the base of a tree along the road. I pulled over and knocked on a door and asked the homeowner for a bucket of water to put it out.
You're welcome, Milstadt. I should send the town a postcard with instructions on where I want them to install the statue.
"it doesn't matter" is not exactly true, but the importance of dietary cholesterol was wayyy overblown for decades until scientists figured out that it's actually the cholesterol in your blood that matters most.
bacon (any cured meat) is not problematic because of its cholesterol, but because of the nitrite and nitrate that industrial processors use, which makes it one of the most carcinogenic food items on earth
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/mar/01/bacon-cancer-processed-meats-nitrates-nitrites-sausages
woops
anyway this all wouldn't be that big of an issue if bacon was made the way it's supposed to be made - by curing it in nothing but salt. but that takes a long time and makes less moneyyou could theoretically make your bacon at home, and while it's not "healthy", it's not nearly as bad as industrially produced bacon