Food and the wool being pulled over America's eyes regarding full disclosure is a hot topic for me. I'm afraid if I start down the rant on the tip of my tongue, this whole post is going down in flames, so I won't. I will say that the book The Ethics of What We Eat is an incredibly well researched book without any intended spin, just a record of what an ethicist and a journalist found when tracing groceries back to the source. If you want to call that a scare tactic, fine. It scares me. I wrote the Publisher's Weekly review back when I was a book critic, and it was one of the books that stays with a person for life. Great diet aid, too- I lost 10 pounds after reading it because some very common foods in our pantry were boycotted FOREVER.
http://www.amazon.com/Ethics-What-We-Eat-Choices/dp/1594866872
BACK TO OUR REGULARLY SCHEDULED THREAD...
I love the change in attitude folks get when they find the differently colored eggs 'gourmet' over 'different.' That will never lessen in amusement for me.
Regarding egg age: Grocery stores often get things shipped into a distribution center long before the get to stores. Eggs are no different, and may arrive at the grocery shelves quite aged because of this. Egg distributors often label the very same eggs for many, many different clients, and thus if demand is down, the eggs labeled for that client may sit for a bit. I worked for a grocer. I know sometimes stock would come in with VERY little time left prior to 'Use By' date, which invariably ended up in a Manager's Special or sale. Since there is such a prolonged shelf life for eggs, I'm guessing this means the eggs were a month-plus old, though at the time I didn't have chickens so I never looked.
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This sounds immensely condescending, so I'm going to assume you DON'T mean to. On certain things regarding food production to which many object, which may be what you considered the 'Food Scare Industry,' --if it is an industry, who profits from it? If you didn't mean to condescend, what did you mean?