Dan Barber: A surprising parable of foie gras

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • www.ted.com At the Taste3 conference, chef Dan Barber tells the story of a small farm in Spain that has found a humane way to produce foie gras. Raising his geese in a natural environment, farmer Eduardo Sousa embodies the kind of food production Barber believes in.

Комментарии • 266

  • @gcbranco
    @gcbranco 5 лет назад +39

    I've seen this video a dozen times, and a dozen times it has moved me, both by Dan's eloquent story-telling talent and by Eduardo's marvelous approach to foie-gras production

    • @mosiah9205
      @mosiah9205 5 лет назад +3

      Same here. Videos like this are inspiring and give me hope. Maybe a little cheesy to say, but it's how I'm feeling.

    • @UliKaiser
      @UliKaiser 4 года назад +3

      Yes!!!

    • @TheHardCore89
      @TheHardCore89 Год назад

      You’ll be surprised to know that Eduardo’s way of making foie gras is actually the original way of making foie gras… it wasn’t invented by the French but by the Romans.
      And they made it exactly like Eduardo😊
      Quite fascinating in my opinion😅

    • @Lucien135
      @Lucien135 Год назад

      Fun fact to anyone reading this. Insider business made a video about eduardo and his farm.

    • @Gravy_moat
      @Gravy_moat 6 месяцев назад

      Dan Barber has such a way with words. Can make any story captivating, his passion for food really shines through the way he speaks.

  • @WilsonSemilio
    @WilsonSemilio 16 лет назад +17

    One of the best TED talks I've seen! This has GOT to be one of the ways forward if we are to save our planet: Re-structure farming / agriculture.

  • @pam8585
    @pam8585 6 лет назад +32

    "Because chefs don't deserve my foie gras" best line ever.

  • @suckerfree23
    @suckerfree23 15 лет назад +14

    As Louross of Hell's Kitchen (Season 4) said, "Make love to the fish!"
    His Foie Gras is about expressing nature, in its purest form, not about romanticizing brutality. As a chef, it brings tears to my eyes seeing such dedication, such love of the earth and its creatures.

  • @kokoro37
    @kokoro37 5 лет назад +8

    Coming back to watch this video again 11 years after I first watched it. Still as enlightening and amazing as the first time I watched it. Gives me a sense of awe for nature and the farmers doing extensive farming instead of intensive. Great job.

  • @davidchoimusic
    @davidchoimusic 16 лет назад +7

    LoveMattersMost, watch this again before commenting. This video has nothing to do with animal torture.

  • @TheNewLemurian
    @TheNewLemurian 16 лет назад +12

    When you work with nature, nature works with you.
    I love this chef!

  • @jcflorezz
    @jcflorezz 15 лет назад +9

    Dan Barber is one of the most important chefs this world has right now.

  • @DavidBall67
    @DavidBall67 15 лет назад +10

    As a spokesperson for ethics, Barber is a cut above

  • @kinguther0
    @kinguther0 14 лет назад +5

    Wow... Gave me a different perspective of Foie Gras.
    and that presenter was awesome.

  • @TomEveson99
    @TomEveson99 16 лет назад +5

    Great story, engaging speaker!

  • @asgabeler
    @asgabeler 12 лет назад +5

    The Goose Whisperer,
    The geese actually squawk to the geese flying by, come eat with us!

  • @LloydieP
    @LloydieP 11 лет назад +2

    This chef has been a huge inspiration for me. Funny how the comments are here are mostly thoughtful and reasonable.

    • @SkyeTsow
      @SkyeTsow 7 лет назад

      Now look at them

  • @DixyRae
    @DixyRae 15 лет назад +2

    If you, personally, consider it disgusting then don't partake in meat-eating. Equating the act of taking another human's life to eating fried chicken crosses the line of sane argument.

  • @JKayification
    @JKayification 11 лет назад +5

    When the geese topple our human regime and institute a brutal avian autocracy, only a few chefs will survive the initial carnage.

  • @Reggieworth
    @Reggieworth 14 лет назад +7

    500 bucks a kilo for Eduardo's confit
    im so glad to see ethical treatment of animals brought to the forefront by someone other than hippies
    sustainable agriculture is vital for sustainable human existance

  • @btwbrand
    @btwbrand 15 лет назад +4

    Over the past three years( same amount of time I've been unemployed) I've had the chance to Sit back and watch the Hustle and Bustle of "life" as I knew it from a spectators view. There are so many Unnatural habits people have adopted to increase production and speed of production.. Always at the expense of quality and environment. It's a pleasure to hear the story of Eduardo and his consideration of his geese as they do what they do. Live.

  • @petrina33
    @petrina33 12 лет назад +4

    How do I get this naturally raised Foie gras! I want to eat some. I haven't eaten foie gras in years because of how it's produced.

  • @ThanksgivingWalk
    @ThanksgivingWalk 12 лет назад +18

    Fair warning! The first 2 mintues of this film will "bother" many. For those of you with patience, a love for the fair treatment of animals, and a sense of self responsibility for the way we treat the earth, this is for you. Enjoy.

  • @InnuendoXP
    @InnuendoXP 12 лет назад +6

    I've never understood that personally. In my country the vast majority of cows are pasture-fed, "grain-fed" beef is only grain-fed for the last 3 months of the cows life to promote fat gain. Grain is far more expensive than grass here.
    Factory farming of any kind is an unpleasant affair though. Meat is a luxury really, we've just all gotten too used to being able to get it cheaply. If we paid what it should be worth then animals would be raised better.

  • @WilsonSemilio
    @WilsonSemilio 16 лет назад +1

    Maybe a lot o people are watching on the TED site? At least one would hope so...

  • @suckerfree23
    @suckerfree23 15 лет назад +4

    I keep a garden, which acts like a band-aid to my open wound caused by 'fast food', microwave dinners, but, this man, goes the extra step to fulfill the vacuum in the culinary status quo. Food in the most pure, most delicate, and most beautiful form is what makes life special.

  • @CheezMonsterCrazy
    @CheezMonsterCrazy 16 лет назад +1

    iosuVakerizzo, people who hunt "for fun" as you put it most usually eat the animal they kill, or donate it to charities that use the meat to feed the hungry. Recreational hunting is also helps with population control, since the amount of predators in most places is relatively low nowadays due to human settlement.

  • @boxant
    @boxant 16 лет назад +5

    Very interesting talk, and I hope we move in this direction.

  • @steven4966
    @steven4966 Год назад +2

    Who else is here after that ‘natural foie gras’ vid lol. Man is a legend

  • @victoriagreer4297
    @victoriagreer4297 10 лет назад +5

    Excellent! Enlightening.

  • @ridethespiral1219
    @ridethespiral1219 Год назад +1

    Such a phenomenal speaker. Love his eloquence and ability to tie everything together.

  • @kristofferkavallin
    @kristofferkavallin 15 лет назад +1

    I did watch the video. I still dislike it.
    Look, the farmer in this video may treat his animals better than others, but that doesn't make it right.
    Compare it with a honest slave-owner: "Oh, hes such a loving adorable person, he treats his slaves good!" and you just might get the point.

  • @Trazynn
    @Trazynn 15 лет назад +4

    Lions don't make their prey suffer for a life-time.
    And I love how you dodged johnyprestige's "two wrongs don't make a right"

  • @vlasevmovement
    @vlasevmovement 16 лет назад +2

    Amazing. For the disgusted people - please watch again and really try to learn.
    This all sounds really amazing. However, how are we going to feed everybody with the good, sound, ecological way?

  • @maniacguitar
    @maniacguitar 14 лет назад

    @astephiesteph would you say the same to a broccoli farmer? he loves planting his broccoli so much that he just cuts them in the end.
    Just 'cuz ducks have an anatomy a bit closer to us (made out of meat) doesn't mean they are more of a living creature than a plant is. Plants communicate in different ways (chemical concoctions) so they appear to us as a "non-living" creature.
    We live off food, we will die eventually, so does geese. Would you rather the geese live a horrible life while they live?

  • @karatatatekid
    @karatatatekid 15 лет назад +1

    lol. i have dan barber for my CIA gastro project right now!

    • @C00kii0
      @C00kii0 4 года назад

      I just picked him as a Chef for my paper 😂

  • @william4261
    @william4261 6 лет назад +7

    apparently our taste buds are more important then their only life

  • @barath4545
    @barath4545 14 лет назад

    @kinguther0 Agree completely. Awesome video. Only problem with Foie Gras like this, is the way it can become too intense in flavour.

  • @massivereader
    @massivereader 16 лет назад

    MishaVargas,
    You may well be right, not being a speaker of french, nor a consumer of foie gras, I have never had occasion or the need to actually pronounce the word.
    I was responding to a question in an earlier post. That is what the person framing the question thought the speaker in this video was saying. I simply pointed out the correct spelling was in the title and informed him that it meant "liver of fat goose"

  • @browntran
    @browntran 12 лет назад +1

    "No force-feeding, no factory-like conditions, no cruelty..." Until it comes time to kill the bird and remove the liver, right? If we're going to eat meat let's be honest about the cruelty of slaughtering animals for food "because they're so freakin' delicious." I'm not opposed to eating animals or foie gras, but come on, it's cruel to kill something and eat it.

  • @patrickmcgraw4646
    @patrickmcgraw4646 Год назад

    I thought it was called lichin (Liken) bush. Never heard of lupen bush. Anybody have any input on that?

  • @TigerYoshiki
    @TigerYoshiki 15 лет назад +1

    Now I want my blue ketchup and crystal pepsi back starring at neon yellow foie-gras.
    (Yeah, I know this TED is about using natural procedures to improve food, not chemicals)

  • @astephiesteph
    @astephiesteph 14 лет назад +2

    He loved his geese soooo much that he took their livers...

    • @GedenWilbur
      @GedenWilbur 5 лет назад +1

      I know right? "This guy love his geese like his kids" dude someone needs to go take the kids away from this man,.

  • @audaciousamateur
    @audaciousamateur 15 лет назад +1

    It's best with some fava beans and a nice chianti.

  • @baronmorris
    @baronmorris 16 лет назад

    it takes 16 lbs of grain to raise 1 lb of meat, and 100 x the H2O. Just sayin, if feeding the starving is at issue, then meat should be off the menu.
    We don't have scarcity, we have resource mismanagement (and manufactured/percieved scarcity, thx to marketing, etc.)
    peace

  • @Ebvardh
    @Ebvardh 12 лет назад +7

    It hardly classifies as cruel.
    Cruel means to cause pain or suffering without feeling concern about those you're hurting.
    Making sure an animal lives the best life possible before you kill it is hardly a lack of concern.

  • @wishIdpaidattention
    @wishIdpaidattention 14 лет назад

    putting vegetable peelings, leaf cutting, lawn mowings in my compost bin produces an incredible amount of insect life all breaking everything down to a teeming pulsating mass of life. Put this in the garden and what grows is full of energy.Couldn't be simpler and more meaningful imo. Every plant, insect , animal and human benefits within this generous environment .

  • @DixyRae
    @DixyRae 15 лет назад +1

    Self hatred redirected into guilt about being human, and reinforced by animal rights activism?
    What I'm not getting is whether you're getting more worked up over the fact that animals are killed at all, or that some poachers use unnecessarily cruel methods? Yeah, habitats get threatened, that is why we have systems (funded partly by hunting organizations) that research and protect wildlife. If hunting were illegal, poaching would skyrocket and whole populations would be wiped out.

  • @AlmightScoop
    @AlmightScoop 16 лет назад

    mmmmmmmmm.....
    I love fois gras. I really really want to try this stuff. If I ever go to Spain.

  • @merx444
    @merx444 15 лет назад

    woah... i think your in my block! i have wasser. but are you in the second half of B block?

  • @kathleenmckeon9926
    @kathleenmckeon9926 9 лет назад +2

    Wow some real negative people on here. Thats alright if you are on the CAFTA sites and working hard on those animals behalf. I for one will be looking to see your impact.

  • @int3rl0per
    @int3rl0per 16 лет назад

    Read the wikipedia page "History of the Jews in Egypt" - it's been pretty well established that they've been a good chunk of the population of Alexandria since its founding.

  • @ohmichael203
    @ohmichael203 15 лет назад

    Eating foie gras is equal to child molestation? I don't like foie gras but you need to get some perspective.

  • @piedadsaiz
    @piedadsaiz Год назад +1

    This guy runs one of the most toxic and abusive restaurants in the US

  • @markus310773
    @markus310773 16 лет назад

    He has some interesting points.
    On the one hand I believe that we really have to become more conscious of what we eat for both ethical and environmental reasons. If people would theoretically eat more Kobe meat for example, they would automatically eat less due to its high prices. Which would be good for us (health), the environment (meat "production" is not very ecological) and ethical (the cows get treated very well...
    to be continued

  •  16 лет назад

    You are what you eat, it shouldn't be mass produced garbage.

  • @massivereader
    @massivereader 16 лет назад

    "Fo gra" is how you pronounce the french words "Foie Gras" in the video title. It refers to "liver of fat goose". It is a meat product traditionally produced by force feeding geese and excess of grain until their livers grow to 8 times the normal size.
    It is widely considered a culinary delicacy due to the rich taste.

  • @DixyRae
    @DixyRae 15 лет назад +1

    My problem with vegans (vegetarians are usually less obnoxious) is that they take their lifestyle choice and present it to the rest of the world as moral doctrine. I don't like being preached to no matter what the subject.
    Being told by a vegan that eating something tasty is immoral and makes me comparable to a nazi is just as bad as a religious fanatic telling me that having sex when and how I want will earn me a ticket to hell.

  • @DixyRae
    @DixyRae 15 лет назад

    What about insects, or oysters, or crabs? Or is only immoral to eat the cuddly animals?

  • @InfectedDaemon
    @InfectedDaemon 16 лет назад

    JanetKeleher
    There are 10 essential aminoacids that the human must consume for a correct development, 2 of which only come in meat, add to that that most grains on there own don't contain all of the rest of aminoacids. Plus we also need B12, that is found exclusively in meat (vegans have to receive B12 shots monthly) deficiency = Microcitic or Pernicious Anemia and subacute combined spinal cord degeneration. Also, grains and vegetables are usually a very poor source of Niacin = Pellagra.

  • @JimBCameron
    @JimBCameron 10 лет назад +2

    Brilliant! Please watch this. :)

  • @josehawkins4276
    @josehawkins4276 10 лет назад +1

    Excellent.

  • @richardhod2
    @richardhod2 11 лет назад

    This was on "This American Life" last year. This is how he heard about it.

  • @JacekNasiadek
    @JacekNasiadek 16 лет назад

    You should wake up. Search for a video on YT entitled:
    The Most important Video You'll Ever See (it's broken into 8 parts, watch them all).
    Also search for term 'peak oil' on YT.
    So the more of us there are the better we'll be at creating solutions to problems arising because there's too many of us? I'm speechless... Can't argue with such impeccable logic.

  • @wischef64
    @wischef64 15 лет назад

    It would were not for the fact that my answers to those questions differ greatly from yours.

  • @DixyRae
    @DixyRae 15 лет назад +1

    They still both impose personal morals onto other people, which, to me, seems more wrong than eating a burger.

  • @josehawkins4276
    @josehawkins4276 10 лет назад +2

    Very Tasteful. Treat other beings as if you were that being. Much more satisfiying than doing into other people like ourselves.

  • @takoyukki
    @takoyukki 11 лет назад +1

    this was uploaded more than 4 years ago.

    • @melody5437
      @melody5437 3 года назад

      And?

    • @takoyukki
      @takoyukki 3 года назад

      @@melody5437 I made that comment more than 4 years ago

    • @melody5437
      @melody5437 3 года назад

      @@takoyukki And?

  • @mickisuzanne
    @mickisuzanne 15 лет назад

    This video was sent to me by a friend who has a goose farm. Note that I am vegetarian and love birds. Well, she loves her birds too. She cries at harvest. We need to remember that farmers feed us. There is a Buddhist quote, something like "don't hate the butcher if you eat the meat." I think this is an incredible message and believe Eduardo's message of listening to nature should be brought to prominence in this country and elsewhere.

  • @n3wby001
    @n3wby001 16 лет назад

    I was hinting more towards genetically engineered crops and plants. It's not natural but it is the only way we can feed so many people.

  • @pascoett
    @pascoett 14 лет назад +1

    Really good speech about this difficult issue. How ever problematic the interest in just a small part of a goose may be - here is the prove to have an ecologially and morally better way to attain it. We don't have to forbid eveything, but we have to think about what we eat, where it comes from and how the animals are treated.
    You may also watch the multimedia page of the Pateria de Sousa, it is very interesting too!

  • @Unclejohntyskitchen
    @Unclejohntyskitchen 4 года назад

    Just brilliant, thank you.

  • @Rantandreason
    @Rantandreason 16 лет назад +1

    It was great up until his story of the jews. Egypt never kept slaves. And it was two Israeli archeologists that discovered this fact.

  • @JosuVaquerizo
    @JosuVaquerizo 16 лет назад

    you are absolutely right Cypherson, I should not let my tempert come into it and i should not insult people, but some of his comments at the begining of this video i found pretty insulting and offensive. Anyway, you are right, i should argue my point without insulting anyone. I appologize to Mr Barber, but i still find some of what he said deeply insulting, and anger is only a sign of caring. I wasn't so much argueing, i was responding to what i saw as a very unfair attitude towards animals.

  • @InnuendoXP
    @InnuendoXP 12 лет назад

    Far less cruel than things like shark finning.
    Because let's be REALLY honest. Whatever anyone's position on eating meat.. I think we can all agree, just because we eat animals, doesn't mean we have to be dicks about it.

  • @sheripennington3900
    @sheripennington3900 9 лет назад +5

    this may true for this farmer but how many others are doing it just to make money. if the treatment of the geese were regulated to see that they were treated humanely there wouldn't be a problem. every living creature on this planet deserves humane treatment.

  • @n3wby001
    @n3wby001 16 лет назад

    This is nice but lets be realistic how are you going to feed 10 billion empty stomachs?

  • @fern3R
    @fern3R 12 лет назад

    @browntran for me it isn't cruel to kill something to EAT it, for me it relies on how you do it, for example the north american meat industry, how they kill animals for mass production in contrast there is Kobe beef or Kosher meat or butcheries where animals live surrounded by nature with enough space for each one instead of crowded rooms without light and where they eat genetically modified food; also there is gabage in France and natural foie gras in Spain and USA,

  • @SchinTeth
    @SchinTeth 15 лет назад

    Did you even watch the video

  • @finn7530
    @finn7530 Год назад +1

    anyone else here from business insider’s foie gras episode?

  • @GlaciusTS
    @GlaciusTS 7 лет назад +15

    Lol, someone comes up with a humane way to produce Foie Gras and people complain about animal killing for food.
    Seriously Vegans, pick your battles. If you aren't happy with the cruelty towards animals, be supportive towards alternatives. If this practice of producing Foie Gras isn't picked up, the force feeding continues. Your complaints towards a humane practice actually keep the force feeding in business.

    • @SkyeTsow
      @SkyeTsow 7 лет назад +2

      THIS IS WHAT INFURIATES ME. THEY REJECT ALL PROGRESS EXCEPT TOTAL VEGANISM

    • @tseuren123
      @tseuren123 6 лет назад

      compare it with wars, it used to be totally fine to do ANYTHING, like using chemical weapons and starving the population. Now progress is (being) made and circumstances are improved. Does this mean that war is now fine and dandy and isn't bad? No, but progress is progress, so don't get mad for banning chemical weapons but be happy that progress is being made.

    • @hasnapapadaa7709
      @hasnapapadaa7709 6 лет назад

      GlaciusTS kocM

    • @GedenWilbur
      @GedenWilbur 5 лет назад

      The world is going to go vegan at some point. Humanity will realize on their futile search of the universe to find life, that the best chances we have are guiding other lifeforms to evolve with dignity. Even if we find a bacterial lifeform on another planet, it will not be as fascinating or evolved as on ours. We will look back on our meat industry in the same way we look back on concentration camps. Except the meat industry is more cruel.

  • @johnyprestige
    @johnyprestige 15 лет назад

    anything that feels or has been subjected to "pain" in order you to benefit i would consider disgusting, unless you had no other option to survive.
    but last time i checked surviving isn't on my list of worries.

  • @DixyRae
    @DixyRae 15 лет назад

    Its proposed that our dexterous hands are evolved to pick seeds. We walk upright to watch for predators. We have color, binocular vision for easier hunting of insects (mind you, the species was fairly small at this point). Cats also have binocular vision for hunting. It is a predatory adaptation. We are omnivorous. We can survive on just plants if we want, AND we can survive on just meat if we are adapted in certain ways. Inuits are a good example of an all meat diet, mostly red meat and fat.

  • @johnyprestige
    @johnyprestige 15 лет назад

    to your last question : No one is forcing you to eat meat, why do you feel the need to try and force others not to? which is worse? forcing someone not to eat meat or forcing an animal to die so that you can have a burger that you don't appreciate.
    i believe the upsides to this argument are better than the downsides...

  • @JosuVaquerizo
    @JosuVaquerizo 15 лет назад

    a being of such an amount of inteligence should be capable of choosing what is moraly right over what "tastes good". And by the way if you think that killing animals for food is moraly right, then you are not considering this issue in an objective manner. You are purposely(although possibly without realizing) ignoring the way in which some 99% of the animals you eat are being treated(that's right, knowing that someone in spain treats the animals well doesn't change what you actually eat!) + more

  • @tomh6339
    @tomh6339 16 лет назад

    I actually meant that if you could accept your own mortality then you might find it easier to accept eating something that has died. The simple fact of animal death is not the issue, animal welfare is the issue. We need to improve standards of care in animal husbandry.

  • @johnyprestige
    @johnyprestige 15 лет назад

    no it isn't, because one relies on logic and the other relies on ignorance.

  • @JacekNasiadek
    @JacekNasiadek 16 лет назад

    I could understand your argument if you were at least advocating sacrificing our high standard of living on the altar of some worthy cause (like freedom and peace). But you're essentially saying we should sacrifice it to increase our numbers (and in the process probably exterminate many more species of animals than we already have).

  • @MishaVargas
    @MishaVargas 16 лет назад

    LoveMattersMost, if you'd listen to what everyone is saying, you'd realize that this video is specifically about NOT torturing animals.
    Wait, I'm confused - does your criticism of this anti-abuse video mean you support animal torture?
    Unplug your ears, LMM, and listen to people.

  • @Jshmelo
    @Jshmelo 15 лет назад

    But they do make a deeeeelicous pate.

  • @Cypherson
    @Cypherson 16 лет назад

    Lesson for life. Get all the facts before you make radical sweeping generalizations and call someone out. Watch the whole thing and you'll see...
    People eat animals, and your opinion dictates your actions, not anyone else's. You forcing your opinion on a meat eating person would be akin to someone forcing you to eat meat.

  • @JacekNasiadek
    @JacekNasiadek 16 лет назад

    Why should there be 10 bln stomachs on this planet? Every single species of animal on earth multiplies to a point where environmental attrition inevitably brings it back to it's natural state of misery and starvation.
    Aren't we the only species capable of seeing this and therefore capable of acting accordingly? Either we allow nature to take care of the problem (and nature can be harsh) or we do it ourselves (preserving our high standard of living).

  • @elianmusic7452
    @elianmusic7452 Год назад

    I come watch this ted talk once every few years. I dont know why this story resonates so deeply with me. 10 years now iv been rewatching this.

  • @opreapetru404
    @opreapetru404 4 года назад

    bravissimo well done mr dan

  • @snrugh
    @snrugh 16 лет назад

    I thought it was a good talk. Just because I don't agree with the point of view doesn't mean his talk was poorly done.

  • @johnyprestige
    @johnyprestige 15 лет назад

    two wrongs don't make a right...

  • @VliengWieng
    @VliengWieng 16 лет назад +1

    You still have to kill them though....

    • @C00kii0
      @C00kii0 4 года назад

      Everything dies.

  • @matthewbaumann630
    @matthewbaumann630 7 лет назад

    It's nice they don't want to factory farm them, but I still don't want to eat ducks or chickens.

  • @DanielBarber-mo2en
    @DanielBarber-mo2en Год назад

    His taste is more important than the goose , huh , and people think he is bright! Sad indeed

  • @tomh6339
    @tomh6339 16 лет назад

    I wouldn't hold it against a hippopotamus if it killed me to defend its young, nor would I deem a whacking great saltwater crocodile to be morally wrong if it consumed me for sustenance. If a goose managed to kill me it wouldn't be in the wrong.
    In our society, however, we have submitted to the social contract and we're not permitted to kill or even injure each other whatever the reason.

  • @matthewj1985
    @matthewj1985 15 лет назад

    I am a classically trained French Chef and I just can't get over how creepy this guy looks. I love foie gras, I HATE how it is made and refuse to use it but this guy just creeps me out......

  • @karatatatekid
    @karatatatekid 15 лет назад

    yeah. i'm in the second half. i have raider. at 7 in the am.

  • @gwc3721
    @gwc3721 4 года назад

    Most ingratiating video Ive ever watched. This guy feels so guilty about what he is eating he dreams up how he feels about food. And why the necisity to inject "a jew from NY"?

    • @finn7530
      @finn7530 Год назад

      humor. he was playing into his stereotype.

  • @markus310773
    @markus310773 16 лет назад

    ....
    On the other hand, however, we face huge problems with food production. The worldwide population has become too big. In order to get food to everybody we have to unfortunately also have to find other solutions. Otherwise we would need much more land for agriculture... One solution might be birth control but that's another story (the big religions don't like it).
    Nevertheless I believe it is very important for us to become more conscious of what and how we eat.