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Good Eats>What Mc Donald's is feeding you...
looking for know 03:11 PM 01-01-2010
Originally Posted by hotreds:
Eating brains from a monkey whose skull is opened at your table doesn't sound so bad now, eh?
I hear they're tasty.
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floydpink 03:57 PM 01-01-2010
If there is anything better than a McRib sandwich, can someone please point it out to me?
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T.G 04:06 PM 01-01-2010
Originally Posted by Subvet642:
Dude, maybe that was all you; I was Sublant out of Holy Loch. :-) Man, it rocks being a Squid, don't it?
Yeah, we all had some times back then. Strange how we look back on getting thrown out of places like that as badges of honor isn't it?

Oh, no wait, we called that "World Travel" and "Experiencing Other Cultures". :-)
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Montano 04:29 PM 01-01-2010
Originally Posted by T.G:
Been there, done that, sobered up before I got the tattoo though.
I got my first tat in the Navy. I was sober :-)

Mickey D's was always the first place I went when the boat got home. Big Mac smothered with sweet-n-sour sauce. Those were the days. Then off to the liquor store........
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Subvet642 10:22 PM 01-01-2010
Originally Posted by T.G:
Yeah, we all had some times back then. Strange how we look back on getting thrown out of places like that as badges of honor isn't it?

Oh, no wait, we called that "World Travel" and "Experiencing Other Cultures". :-)
Things have a funny way of looking better in the rear view mirror. I wasn't usually thrown out, as much as dragged out by Shore Patrol.
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Subvet642 10:24 PM 01-01-2010
Originally Posted by Montano:
I got my first tat in the Navy. I was sober :-)

Mickey D's was always the first place I went when the boat got home. Big Mac smothered with sweet-n-sour sauce. Those were the days. Then off to the liquor store........
Boat? Were you a Bubblehead, too?
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BlackDog 11:56 PM 01-01-2010
I haul about 1.5 million pounds of beef a week from Cargill for my company. The sanitary testing is very stringent. My trucks are regularly delayed because product has been held up for USDA testing. Even though a beef recall makes big news it happens incredibly infrequently when you consider the volume of beef produced annually. The USA butchers over 300,000,000 cattle annually. Being a natural product, there are inherent risks with contamination. You've all seen farms at one time or another. They're dirty. Some of that dirt/mud/feces/urine muck that cattle walk in is gong to occasionally make it into the food chain. Our food production and distribution systems are the cleanest in the history of mankind. The use of ammonia is not a problem. The problem is that Beef Products was exempted from testing and recall.

By the way, do you guys realize that the chickens you buy, even the organic free range ones, are washed in bleach after they're butchered?
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Demented 04:28 AM 01-02-2010
"With the U.S.D.A.’s stamp of approval, the company’s processed beef has become a mainstay in America’s hamburgers. McDonald’s, Burger King and other fast-food giants use it as a component in ground beef, as do grocery chains. The federal school lunch program used an estimated 5.5 million pounds of the processed beef last year alone"

It's not just McDonalds.

Stopped eating fast food (with rare exception) in the late '90's and have ground beef and pork at home for nearly as long. The wife has bought ground beef at the market from time to time. After reading this that will not happen again.
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Demented 04:41 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by Subvet642:
Boat? Were you a Bubblehead, too?
What does being a bubblehead have to do with calling your ship a boat? I was on the Shitty-Kitty (CV-63) out of NAS Coronado, we all referred to her as a boat.
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Montano 08:21 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by Subvet642:
Boat? Were you a Bubblehead, too?
Nope. I worked on the flight deck of the USS Tarawa (LHA-1) out of 32nd Street. We all called her a boat.
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Subvet642 08:59 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by Demented:
What does being a bubblehead have to do with calling your ship a boat? I was on the Shitty-Kitty (CV-63) out of NAS Coronado, we all referred to her as a boat.
It's just that I've never heard a skimmer call their ship a boat. Subs have always been called boats.
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raisin 09:50 AM 01-02-2010
Great work here fella's, we've got the government and industrial food magnate's feeding us the infected meat scraps that they shovel off the floor with the crap, piss, and puss and you find it a great time to discuss beer and boats!

How about trying to think of something better and greater than your own wallet and mouth once and awhile, and earn your position at the top of the food chain - before you become part of it...
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looking for know 10:23 AM 01-02-2010
Bring on Soylent Green.
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T.G 10:24 AM 01-02-2010
Ammonia treated ground up meat scraps would have been preferable to the crap turned out by the "cooks" on some of the ships I've been on...
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Subvet642 10:25 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by floydpink:
If there is anything better than a McRib sandwich, can someone please point it out to me?
Tony Roma makes a pretty good version of that, too. Available frozen in 8 count boxes. :-)
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Subvet642 10:27 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by T.G:
Ammonia treated ground up meat scraps would have been preferable to the crap turned out by the "cooks" on some of the ships I've been on...
That's the great part of being on a sub; I heard a guy in the chow line actually say: "What, steak and shrimp, again!?" :-)
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T.G 10:37 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by Subvet642:
That's the great part of being on a sub; I heard a guy in the chow line actually say: "What, steak and shrimp, again!?" :-)
Yeah, but you have to give up daylight, elbow room and fresh air for 30-90 days at a time for those kind of meals. Not knocking it, just not really an attractive trade off to me.
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Montano 10:42 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by Subvet642:
That's the great part of being on a sub; I heard a guy in the chow line actually say: "What, steak and shrimp, again!?" :-)
I heard some scary stories about the goings on onboard a sub. Made me glad I was on a Gator Freighter.
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Subvet642 10:46 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by T.G:
Yeah, but you have to give up daylight, elbow room and fresh air for 30-90 days at a time for those kind of meals. Not knocking it, just not really an attractive trade off to me.
Fair enough! :-) The way I figured it, though, if Ivan can't find you, Ivan can't shoot you. You guys probably got Liberty ports too, I'll bet. What was that like? For us it was 72 days at a time submerged, no Libs, no daylight, no women. Patrol was drag, but I'm glad I did it. :-):-)
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Subvet642 10:47 AM 01-02-2010
Originally Posted by Montano:
I heard some scary stories about the goings on onboard a sub. Made me glad I was on a Gator Freighter.
Scary how?
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