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View Full Version : ‘Bringing home the bacon’ could become redundant because of vegans



Teh One Who Knocks
12-04-2018, 01:09 PM
Richard Hartley-Parkinson for Metro.co.uk


http://imagizer.imageshack.com/img921/4195/UDM4o5.jpg

If you like to kill two birds with one stone, hold your horses because you may just open up a can of worms.

An academic has said that the phrases used in that intro could be culled as vegan lifestyles grow in popularity.

Swansea University researcher Shareena Hamzah said: ‘If veganism forces us to confront the realities of food’s origins, then this increased awareness will undoubtedly be reflected in our language and literature.

‘The increased awareness of vegan issues will filter through consciousness to produce new modes of expression.’

Before you start shouting stone the crows and believe Dr Hamzah is flogging a dead horse, you may be wrong.

Animal rights charity Peta has already been pushing for harm-free alternatives for some time and has a list of suggestions that people could use so not to cause offence to vegans, horses, eggs or guinea pigs.

Dr Hamzah wrote on academic website The Conversation: ‘The image of “killing two birds with one stone” is, if anything, made more powerful by the animal-friendly alternative of “feeding two birds with one scone”.’

https://i.imgur.com/irRskLr.png

Peta says on its website: ‘While these phrases may seem harmless, they carry meaning and can send mixed signals to students about the relationship between humans and animals and can normalise abuse.

‘Teaching students to use animal- friendly language can cultivate positive relationships between all beings.’

Ms Hamzah added: ‘Historically, the resources required to obtain meat meant it was mainly the preserve of the upper classes, while the peasantry subsisted on a mostly vegetarian diet.

‘As a result, the consumption of meat was associated with dominant power structures in society, its absence from the plate indicating disadvantaged groups, such as women and the poor.

‘To control the supply of meat was to control the people.’

PorkChopSandwiches
12-04-2018, 04:48 PM
:haha: no

DemonGeminiX
12-04-2018, 04:53 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ug_iluxQ1IQ

Muddy
12-04-2018, 06:10 PM
Sorry. Not gon do it.

Teh One Who Knocks
12-04-2018, 06:13 PM
Come on, take the flower by the thorns :tup:

Muddy
12-04-2018, 07:39 PM
:daisy:

Noilly Pratt
12-04-2018, 09:48 PM
Well, then we can take it a step further and not user "great" because it makes one think about cheese, and that offends those who are lactose intolerant. We should use the expression from 1984, "doubleplusgood". :huh:

<sound of a can of worms opening up> Using "2 birds with one stone" doesn't normalize abuse, but I would feel like I wanted to strike the speaker if they uttered "feeding 2 birds with one scone". :chair:

It doesn't even make sense if you're not in N. America...Scone is pronounced "scoooone" in N.A, in the UK it's "skhone"...

RBP
12-05-2018, 05:36 AM
‘Historically, the resources required to obtain meat meant it was mainly the preserve of the upper classes, while the peasantry subsisted on a mostly vegetarian diet.

So we should survive on a peasant diet, and stifle the speech of the people that eat well.

got it.

Godfather
12-05-2018, 05:48 AM
"Bring home the bagels"

Antisemite :hand:

RBP
12-05-2018, 06:00 AM
"Bring home the bagels"

Antisemite :hand:

jew bagel jokes take lox of balls.

DemonGeminiX
12-05-2018, 09:36 AM
jew bagel jokes take lox of balls.

:-k

*Googles*


Lox is a fillet of brined salmon. Lox is one type of salmon product served on a bagel with cream cheese,[1][2] and is usually garnished with tomato, sliced onion, cucumbers, and sometimes capers. The other type of salmon product is smoked salmon.

The American English word lox[3] is derived from the Yiddish word for salmon, לאַקס laks (cf. German Lachs, Swedish Lax), which ultimately derives from the Germanic word for salmon, *laks-.[4] The word lox has cognates in numerous Germanic languages. For example, cured salmon in Scotland and Scandinavian countries is known by different versions of the name Gravlax or gravad laks. (lax or laks means "salmon" in the Scandinavian languages.)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lox


I learned something new today. Neat!

deebakes
12-06-2018, 12:36 AM
:shock:

Godfather
12-06-2018, 03:07 AM
:-k

*Googles*



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lox


I learned something new today. Neat!

Oh man if you ever get up to BC let me know. I'm sure the best bagels are on the east coast, but we have some damn good montreal-style bagels here with west coast salmon lox :drool: