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"SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating supermarket food
"Julianne" > wrote in message news:<e2jTb.6757$gl2.3218@lakeread05>...
> > There are three very solid positions on this issue. One is that if smoke > makes you miserable, avoid it. Surely, someone who can play trumpet can > also find other work of equal pay. But isn't that just as absurd as saying that computer programmers who don't like getting hit by chainsaws (in my previous example) should change their profession, rather than making chainsaw swinging illegal? I'm assuming this is not the stance you're taking of the two. > second hand smoke is a hazard. There is a lot of anecdotal evidence but > with the exception of small children and airline personnel who work on long > distance flights, there is no solid research. Thankfully, infants are not > often brought to jazz bars. Yea but what about the airline personnel study? Did the study show that they have negative health effects? You kind of quietly dodged that there.. > Smoking in public places is avoidable. So is entertainment and relaxation. > There is no law that says I am entitled to a place where I can relax without > being bothered by the ways of others. Well no, but like I said, there is a law that you can't swing chainsaws around for your entertainment and relaxation. In other words, you're allowed to enjoy entertainment and relaxation, but not at the expense of other people's health. You can't shoot skeet in your backyard, because you might shoot someone, but you can do it elsewhere where your enjoyment won't hurt me. How is that any different from smoking? (And by the way, there actually IS a "law that says I am entitled to a place where I can relax without being bothered by the ways of others"- that place is your own home, and there are books full of laws about not being bothered by others while you're in your own home. I know that's not our main argument here but your statement was flawed and I had to point it out.) > nausea and sensitivity to light was very real. So, should I move to ban > perfumes? Is it my responsibility to handle my insensitivity or should I > demand that others tend to my needs? This is a good one (and btw perfume gives me headaches too!) I guess in this case, I plead "the majority", which I'm normally sheepish about doing. Another similar example to yours would be the "boy in the bubble"- someone with a terribly weak immune system, vulnerable to even the slightest bit of uncleanliness. I guess the difference between vulnerability to perfume and smoking is that second hand smoke (if proven to be dangerous) is likely to be dangerous to just about everyone, (kind of like swinging a chainsaw around). So as a rule, I don't think anyone should be allowed to do ANYTHING that directly endangers "most" types of people in the given area, even if only moderately. Or at least allowing it should be a special case- like a free speech rally or something, labelled as such in the laws (like an amendment), and I can't imagine that you think smoking tobacco qualifies for that kind of "essential liberty" status. So- "Don't ride your bike on the sidewalk, Don't store explosives on your front porch, Don't drive with your headlights off, Don't start a bonfire in the middle of a thick forest, and why not 'don't smoke or throw acid in a crowded room'". Seems to me that this is the foundation of law in general, right? I guess it depends on the study... |
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"SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating supermarket food
"Julianne" > wrote in
news:e2jTb.6757$gl2.3218@lakeread05: I am less prone to actual > migraines after Botox treatment but the nausea and sensitivity to > light was very real. Found this interesting - you've answered a question for me. I suffer from migraines, and had heard a little about the use of Botox. I'd read that it was working by interfering with the trigeminal (think I got that right!) nerve. I figured this meant that the Botox did not actually stop the migraine from occurring, but stopped the symptom of pain whilst other symptoms - aura, nausea etc. would remain. Your post seems to have confirmed this - thanks for the info! Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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I'm not a "troll" "SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating supermarket food
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"SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating supermarket food
Why eat food that you shouldn't eat everyday?
> "SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating at > the supermarket. > FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Jan 27, 2004 > > I coducted a study of the effects of eating food only from American > supermarkets. The piece is intended to reveal the nature of the > problem of obesity in America. > > Over the thirty day period my health deteriorated rapidly. My > cholesterol went up by 59 points, I had problems with my vision, I was > depressed and vomiting, I lost confidence in myself, and I considered > becoming a woman. > > The documentary reveals the source of the health problems in America: > fatty foods, sugar-rich foods, insufficient vegetables, mentholyptus, > and mints. The result of eating these foods caused my blood pressure > to increase by 14 pounds per square inch. By the third day, the > vomiting I endured was so frequent and spontaneous that people called > me "projectile boy". > > I am submitting my 184 minute feature production to the Cannes Film > Festival, in the hopes that it will get noticed big directors like > Steven Speilberg, James Cameron, Raymond Martino, and Nacho Vidal. > > Oh by the way, I only ate corned beef, heavy cream, butter, kosher > salt, and sudafed. But it was all purchased from American > supermarkets. I call it "The American Supermarket Diet". > > > > Does it seem like crappy logic to anyone else? McDonalds has salads, > parfaits, the mclean burger, and probably other stuff I don't know > about because I never eat there myself. (I remember the salads were > actually very good.) You can eat only mcdonalds for thirty days and > end up looking even better than Jared. |
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I'm not a "troll" "SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating supermarket food
Geoff, you must shut up.
> Excuse me? Do you disagree with my explanation of trolling, or > perhaps object to my presence in one of the above newsgroups? > What, specifically, is your beef? > > > > Geoff |
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I'm not a "troll" "SuperMarket Me" - A documentary on my health problems from eating supermarket food
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