Guest guest Posted December 14, 2003 Report Share Posted December 14, 2003 it probably hit you in the head lol could imagine the size of them _____ From: Tom [mailto:cassiusdio@...] Sent: Monday, 15 December 2003 5:35 PM Subject: Re: composition of whey/acid vs sweet whey Um, Mike, all mammals give milk, by definition... But I'm with you in that I've never pictured a whale giving milk. I wonder where their nipples are. Tom --- In , " Anton " < > One final remark is that the third link from has a chart > comparing many different animal's milk, and I didn't even realize > that half of them even made milk! So many opportunities for > culinary experimentation! I can only wonder what whale's milk tastes > like... not to mention wonder what it's like to milk a whale... > > Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2003 Report Share Posted December 15, 2003 In a message dated 12/15/03 9:55:59 PM Eastern Standard Time, bwp@... writes: > I kind of remember hearing something like that before, but I really > don't have a biology background. My knowledge filter was probably a > little off-kilter when I was young and I was supposed to learn all > this basic background world knowledge stuff. Sometime I'm going to > read a high-school biology textbook. But it's strange you never > hear about all those other milks out there, like rat's milk or cat's > milk. Maybe I just don't hang around in the right crowds. Don't waste your time; get a college-level General Biology text. I never even took high school biology, and I have an A in my college class, even though I rarely, rarely go to class. You're at least as intelligent as I am. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Most whales have two nipples. One under each pectoral fin. If you milk one please take video, I would love to see it. Amy Re: composition of whey/acid vs sweet whey > Um, Mike, all mammals give milk, by definition... > > But I'm with you in that I've never pictured a whale giving milk. I > wonder where their nipples are. > > Tom @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ I kind of remember hearing something like that before, but I really don't have a biology background. My knowledge filter was probably a little off-kilter when I was young and I was supposed to learn all this basic background world knowledge stuff. Sometime I'm going to read a high-school biology textbook. But it's strange you never hear about all those other milks out there, like rat's milk or cat's milk. Maybe I just don't hang around in the right crowds. Mike Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 In a message dated 12/18/03 1:28:55 PM Eastern Standard Time, bwp@... writes: > i think there's > also some judeo-christian hocus-pocus about eating them. I suggest, then, that you familiarize yourself a little better with judeo-christian hocus pocus. While there are some weird historical comments about Vikings eating horse until they were Christianized, it is quite enshrined in Christianity that it is evil to forbid the eating of *any* food. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 Hi, > Anyway, Christianity and Judaism differ in this essential point of law and > grace. Thus, when early Christians were trying to force the Judaic dietary > laws on one another, stepped in and said that as a Christian under the > new covenant, it was wrong to forbid foods for religious reasons. To do so > implies a lack of understanding of grace, and makes Christianity about > following rules... the very thing Christ came to change. Making Christianity > about rules (legalism) makes Christ's sacrifice meaningless... and though > many Christians do it, it is wrong. > > So the " judeo " part of the hocus-pocus comment was accurate, but the > " Christian " part wasn't (though many people throughout history have > forbidden foods in the " name " of Christianity, I'm sure). Wow, , what an interesting post! Thank you. There are some direct quotes from the bible here which (as I understand) are backing up what you say. http://www.togodbetheglory.com/Poular%20Bible%20Doc/Forbidden%20Foods.html There are often stories in the UK news about horses being shipped to France for consumption, under crowded and miserable conditions, and I was surprised to learn recently that the US also ships horses to France (where often they're eaten raw!!). This seemed so bizarre that I momentarily forgot how much lamb we (uk) import from NZ... Helen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 In a message dated 12/18/03 7:39:24 PM Eastern Standard Time, heidis@... writes: > I agree it is technically forbidden to forbid foods ... a lot > of sects decided to pick up on the Torah rules anyway, > for health reasons. I've heard preachers talk about > how pork should be avoided, not to keep kosher, but > because the rules about pork were given by God > for health reasons. Which isn't something from the > Old or New Testament, just a religious fad of sorts. > > Jewish folks I've talked to adamantly deny this ... > and say the kosher rules are for showing obedience > etc., not for health. So have the entire chain of Christian commentators for thousands of years, until very, very recent in the modern era. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 In a message dated 12/18/03 3:19:54 PM Eastern Standard Time, implode7@... writes: > Wasn't forbidding Catholics to eat meat on Friday forbidding foods > for religious reasons? No. Not in the same sense. What Christianity forbids is the disdain or forbidding of foods due to a belief in the uncleanliness of the food itself, or due to some immorality inherent in eating the food per se. Abstaining from meat on Friday's is not abstaining from meat per se. Clearly one who eats meat on Monday's finds nothing immoral or unclean about meat. The Church (Orthodox/Catholic) and the " Church Fathers " were very clear on this-- fasting is a tool one uses to attain purity of heart and has nothing whatsoever to do with any morality connected to the consumption of the foods fasted from. I will provide evidence at your previous behest for this in a couple of days. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 >> So the " judeo " part of the hocus-pocus comment was accurate, but the >> " Christian " part wasn't (though many people throughout history have >> forbidden foods in the " name " of Christianity, I'm sure). I agree it is technically forbidden to forbid foods ... a lot of sects decided to pick up on the Torah rules anyway, for health reasons. I've heard preachers talk about how pork should be avoided, not to keep kosher, but because the rules about pork were given by God for health reasons. Which isn't something from the Old or New Testament, just a religious fad of sorts. Jewish folks I've talked to adamantly deny this ... and say the kosher rules are for showing obedience etc., not for health. A LOT of the things one associates with Christianity, or Judaism, for that matter, were never in the original documents. The whole war between the Protestants and Catholics, for instance, or the quest for the Holy Grail. Or the persecution of witches. In our era, a lot of the issues fought for by the Right in the name of Christianity aren't really in scripture at all ... I don't know if, in that case, it is fair to say it is a " Christian " thing ... if most " Christians " are fighting for something but it isn't exactly in the Bible, except by remote interpretation. Like extrapolating " don't cook meat and milk in the same pot " from " don't cook a calf in the mother's milk " -- it's a Jewish Kosher rule that you need 2 sets of pots, but only the second phrase is in the Torah. Also ... a lot of churches now are sponsoring group " diets " along religious lines, that your " body is a temple " and therefore needs to be fed well. Which has a certain motivational factor to it ... however the diet they follow is low-fat/food pyramid based. So now you have a church emphasizing a certain kind of diet ... which folks HERE would say is an ill-concieved diet, and some folks might then think that low-fat diet is thereby more " blessed " than some other diet, and eating more fats is " evil " . Mixing faith and science gets really complicated! -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 In a message dated 12/19/03 1:16:12 AM Eastern Standard Time, implode7@... writes: > So, you mean 'Yes, but for different reasons', don't you? Obviously I knew > that, I was just trying to get some clarification, which I received in a > previous post. So, thank you again for your gratuitous argumentation. Perhaps I misunderstood you, but I thought you were asking this as a direct reference to the " forbidding of forbidding " foods, in which case, it is not an example of that. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 18, 2003 Report Share Posted December 18, 2003 So, you mean 'Yes, but for different reasons', don't you? Obviously I knew that, I was just trying to get some clarification, which I received in a previous post. So, thank you again for your gratuitous argumentation. From: ChrisMasterjohn@... Reply- Date: Thu, 18 Dec 2003 23:02:34 EST Subject: Re: Re: composition of whey/acid vs sweet whey In a message dated 12/18/03 3:19:54 PM Eastern Standard Time, implode7@... writes: > Wasn't forbidding Catholics to eat meat on Friday forbidding foods > for religious reasons? No. Not in the same sense. What Christianity forbids is the disdain or forbidding of foods due to a belief in the uncleanliness of the food itself, or due to some immorality inherent in eating the food per se. Abstaining from meat on Friday's is not abstaining from meat per se. Clearly one who eats meat on Monday's finds nothing immoral or unclean about meat. The Church (Orthodox/Catholic) and the " Church Fathers " were very clear on this-- fasting is a tool one uses to attain purity of heart and has nothing whatsoever to do with any morality connected to the consumption of the foods fasted from. I will provide evidence at your previous behest for this in a couple of days. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2003 Report Share Posted December 19, 2003 I was responding to a specific quote in a specific email, in an attempt to clarify the issue for me. The quote I was responding to was clear , and so was my response. The Catholic prohibition from eating meat on Friday WAS a forbidding of certain foods for religious reasons. From: ChrisMasterjohn@... Reply- Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2003 06:20:01 EST Subject: Re: Re: composition of whey/acid vs sweet whey In a message dated 12/19/03 1:16:12 AM Eastern Standard Time, implode7@... writes: > So, you mean 'Yes, but for different reasons', don't you? Obviously I knew > that, I was just trying to get some clarification, which I received in a > previous post. So, thank you again for your gratuitous argumentation. Perhaps I misunderstood you, but I thought you were asking this as a direct reference to the " forbidding of forbidding " foods, in which case, it is not an example of that. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2003 Report Share Posted December 19, 2003 Chris- While I'm really not interested in the larger argument, I think it's fair to call forbidding a food on certain days forbidding a food even if it's a stricture of a somewhat different magnitute from, say, the Muslim and Jewish prohibitions against pork. >Perhaps I misunderstood you, but I thought you were asking this as a direct >reference to the " forbidding of forbidding " foods, in which case, it is >not an >example of that. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2003 Report Share Posted December 19, 2003 In a message dated 12/19/03 1:20:50 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > While I'm really not interested in the larger argument, I think it's fair > to call forbidding a food on certain days forbidding a food even if it's a > stricture of a somewhat different magnitute from, say, the Muslim and > Jewish prohibitions against pork. It's qualitatively different. The Jewish prohibition of pork considers pork " unclean. " Now the meaning of " unclean " is debatable but this discussion arose as a discussion of *taboos*. In other words, does Christianity consider it immoral to eat horse meat. Yes, this is a forbidding of foods for religious reasons. But the issue was more specific than that. I had wrongly interpreted Gene to be referring to the specific issue, rather than the more general wording he used. Chris > > >Perhaps I misunderstood you, but I thought you were asking this as a direct > >reference to the " forbidding of forbidding " foods, in which case, it is > >not an > >example of that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2003 Report Share Posted December 19, 2003 In a message dated 12/20/03 1:07:45 AM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > No, I don't think it was. The issue was just whether Christianity ever > forbids any foods, and it does, end of story. No, that isn't and wasn't the issue , and that isn't the end of the story. Think back: the question was whether our inherited cultural foodway wherein horsemeat is not considered food could be due to Judaeo-Christian taboos on certain foods. Christianity doesn't prohibit certain foods, and considers the prohibition of certain foods as sinful. Christianity does regulate eating patterns of certain foods, at least in large branches of it, but there is no way for, say, a rule against eating horse meat on friday to lead to a culture in which horse is considered unfit to eat. I'm sure you can see the clear difference, vis a vis the issue at hand, between this kind of rule, and say, Jewish or Muslim proscriptions of pork, which would quite clearly lead to a culture in which pigs were either not raised or raised for some non-food purpose. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2003 Report Share Posted December 19, 2003 Chris- No, I don't think it was. The issue was just whether Christianity ever forbids any foods, and it does, end of story. >Yes, this is a forbidding of foods for religious reasons. But the issue was >more specific than that. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2004 Report Share Posted March 31, 2004 In a message dated 12/18/03 1:45:44 PM Eastern Standard Time, implode7@... writes: > Well, certainly in the Old Testament there are passages that forbid > the eating of certain foods, aren't there? I don't think horses is one, but Christianity quite clearly overturned all of these food requirements, so it would be more like " Judaeic " than " JuadaeoChristian " > > Where in Christianity is it " enshrined " that the forbidding of " any " > food is " evil " ? Well, to start,: " The next day, as they were on their journey and coming near the city, went up on the housetop to pray, about the sixth hour. And he became hungry and desired something to eat; but while they were preparing it, he fell into a trance and saw the heaven opened, and something descending like a great sheet, let down by four courners upon the earth. In it were all kinds of animals and reptiles and birds of the air. And there came a voice to him, " Rise, ; kill and eat. " But said, " No, Lord; for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean. " And the voice came to him again a second time, " What God ha cleansed, you must not call common. " This happened three times, and the thing was taken up at once to heaven. " Acts 10:9-16 Less ambiguously-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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