Sujet : Re: Eggs and ethics
De : Hank (at) *nospam* nospam.invalid (Hank Rogers)
Groupes : rec.food.cookingDate : 09. Feb 2025, 01:16:22
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vo8s4u$9b5j$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:128.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/128.0 SeaMonkey/2.53.20
Cindy Hamilton wrote:
On 2025-02-08, Janet <nobody@home.com> wrote:
In article <vo6ehq$3odku$1@dont-email.me>, esp@snet.n
says...
>
I never thought about this before, but should we eat eggs every day?
Should we share?
>
All of my life, eggs have been plentiful and cheap. I like eggs and
most days have two for breakfast. The bird flu has caused millions of
chickens to be destroyed, this eggs are in short supply. Of course,
supply and demand had driven up the price. I went to BJs and bought my
usual xtra lg eggs, two packs of 18. Been buying them like that for
many years. 36 eggs at a time. Not long ago, they were about $^, then
$8.50, then $12, and today, $18 or 50 cents an egg.
>
I'm paying (per large free-range British egg) 26p UK
>
=32c US
>
>
Sure, I can afford them, but should I keep up
consumption or reduce?
>
Your imported/exported egg trade is chiefly with
Canada, EU, UK and China.
>
There will be new tariffs on those markets so the
price of eggs is going to get more expensive.
>
Better eat more American eggs to support your US
producers.
Ed was joking. Again.
Yes, and that fact went completely unnoticed because Queen McCrone failed to follow up with the usual "LOL ed" post.