Thread: N3w
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Scented Nectar
 
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"usual suspect" > wrote in message
. ..
> Skanky wrote:
> >>Claire's self-crippled and morbidly obese Uncle Dreck wrote:
> >>
> >>>>>>>>I've not turned down meals prepared for me by family
> >>>>>>>>members or my friends just because they use foods I
> >>>>>>>>normally don't.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>You DO turn down such meals
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>No, I don't refuse anything.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>You TURNED THEM DOWN,
> >>>>
> >>>>No
> >>>
> >>>Your
> >>
> >>No, fatso, I don't refuse anything. I gratefully accepted the rum cake


Fatso? I'm detecting a fear of
weight problems. Is that why you
used to be vegan and think all
other vegans have eating
disorders?

> >>and shared it with friends and family who like that kind of thing. As
> >>far as my brother goes, the issue was framed with "IF." He knows I
> >>wouldn't eat it, so he won't even offer it. We respect each other that
> >>way, something which appears to be foreign in your Jerry Springer-esque
> >>dysfunctional family. I find it amusing that you object more to sharing
> >>a rum cake than sharing your wife with your own twin brother. Did you
> >>hear David's belly slapping against Belinda's? Why do you object to
> >>sharing rum cake but not to other blokes -- much less your own brother
> >>-- shagging your wife?

> >
> > You snipped the evidence

>
> That wasn't evidence. I admit I shared the rum cake with family and
> friends. The real question is, What would Dreck do if someone were to
> offer him the same cake? Bear in mind he's such a twit that he shunned
> black olives because he was misinformed about the brine in which they're
> cured.


What would you do if you were
given a dish with a huge steak
and a tiny bit of potatoes? In
this example, you are at the
table with others and can't give
it to someone else behind their
backs.

> I used to eat black olives up until a few months ago, but
> stopped after realising they swim around in squid ink, or
> something close to it. I'm always ready to make changes to
> maintain my ethical standard.
> -- Derek Nash, http://tinyurl.com/dcyr3
>
> Would his "ethical standard" preclude him from eating a cake which
> contained eggs and other ingredients of animal origin, or just olives
> which he ignorantly believes "swim around in squid ink"? Would his
> sanctimonious ethics preclude him from giving that cake to people whose
> morals were a little looser than his own (like, maybe, his brother and
> wife)?


You seem awfully preoccupied with
Derek's brother and wife, and their
alleged affair. Still haven't lost your
virginity have you?

> > You seem to have a preoccupation with fatness.

>
> It's not a preoccupation. Dreck has been kind enough to admit his weight
> and even to post pictures of him sleeping with his dog (nothing untoward
> shown in the pics or intended in my remarks). He further has admitted to
> his insatiety when eating. As a result of his gluttony and lack of
> exercise, he's become one of the world's fattest vegans. He's evidence
> that veganism isn't inherently healthier than any other diet, only that
> it comes with a lot of hollow sanctimony. I like to point to him when
> people talk about how veganism is healthier or that vegans are slim and
> trim. Vegans who don't over-eat may be, but so, too, are those
> non-vegans who are sensible in diet and exercise.


I still think you are overly concerned
with weight. Especially since you
use it as an insult by calling Derek
fatso, and morbidly obese.


--
SN
http://www.scentednectar.com/veg/