I'm sure we will be healthier with many fewer fry-ups in the morning, and there's a reason turkeys and the like were traditionally only eaten at Christmas by many- it was a rare treat. Now you can just walk into the supermarket at any time of year and pick one up, I'll bet. (In our family it wasn't even turkey, but chicken. Now we can eat chicken every Sunday and midweek too.)vtsnowedin wrote: Interesting that he totally removes ten million pigs from your diet as well as the meat and eggs from close to a billion chickens and other poultry. No eggs and sausage for breakfast? no Christmas turkey, No roast duck?
In the war meat, eggs and dairy were all rationed. We (or our forebears) survived, Hitler's bombs aside.
Yes of course those tractors need to be fuelled somehow and may end up being too uneconomical to run.He laments the drop in farm jobs after 1947 and blames it on government policy but it was inevitable when a tractor that could do the work of ten teams of heavy horses came on the field you not only no longer needed the twenty horses and their hay and pasture land but you no longer needed nine of the teamsters that walked or rode all day behind the horses driving them.