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The Rural Voice, 1990-03, Page 10ELEGANT HANDCRAFTED FURNITURE Come to the country and browse through a selection of Handcrafted Furniture built in the finest -"MENNONITE"- tradition! Custom Orders Welcomed! • Oak • Cherry • Pine • Maple Dining Room Suites -- Kitchen Suites - Roll Top Desks Bedroom Suites - Rocking Chairs - Oak & Cedar Chests Curios Blanket Boxes Gallery Art Work Jessica Doll Collection Katie's Country Crafts on Highway number nine 9 miles east of Kincardine (1 1/4 miles east of Bervie) 519-395-3461 6 THE RURAL VOICE MADNESS AND A MEATLESS DIET Farmers who produce meat have been struggling to stay above the water for a long time. Sometimes it seems they've been pit in a sack, like unwanted kittens, we;ghted down and thrown in the deep end. Just to make them sink a little fast, r, a few boulders named GATT, free trade, and animal welfare have been added to the sack. The new book by John Robbins, heir to the Baskin Robbins empire, won't do meat producers any favours either. It's called Diet for a New America, and it blames all the world's woes on the consumption of meat, poultry, and fish. Just to give you an idea of how seriously this piece of work is being taken, it's been nomin- ated for this year's Pulitzer Prize! Eugene Whelan warned us several years ago that meat was bad for some people. He remarked that the boys from Bruce County should ease off the beef because it was making them too aggressive. For some people, a meatless diet would be a definite hardship, but to suggest to Super Wrench that a meat- less diet is a possibility makes him see red. This guy gets very cranky when meat isn't served daily. Scrambled eggs are tolerated when time is short, but on a permanent basis they would make him beat his chest in frustration. If such a regime were to mater- ialize, just think of the terminology it would make obsolete. A new diction- ary would have to be published and a fortune could be made revamping restaurant menus. The summer -time barbecue would become a footnote in history. Can you imagine the response of friends if you invited them over for supper and offered to throw a nice, big, juicy, tender zucchini on the grill for them? Ham, bacon, and sausages would no longer be around to accompany the eggs at breakfast and it would take a long time to get used to hearing, "Would you like peas or a salad with your eggs, sir?" Going to a fast-food place for a burger and fries is a modern tradition. Changing that to a soyburger and fries would take some getting used to. I've had a soyburger and couldn't be tempted back for another helping. It's like getting engaged and finding your ring is a zirconia instead of a diamond. Mom's pot roast would only be a memory. Sure, it could be replaced with tofu, but tofu sounds even strang- er than it tastes. Shepherd's pie would become just mashed potatoes and peas. Gravy would also become ob- solete, making french fries inedible. The worst would be going to a res- taurant. The look on Super Wrench's face when the waitress asked him whether he would like his squash rare, medium, or well done could put a whole new meaning on the word ugly. Is too much energy wasted producing protein in animal form? Maybe. But to blame the world's woes on protein is going too far. Next they'll likely connect meat to people who commit crimes. The defence lawyer could argue that his client was under the influence of roast beef before he committed the robbery and should be let off, working on a carrot farm for rehabilitation. As far as meat and aggression go, we need more studies. I know Super Wrench becomes docile after a roast pork dinner. He becomes downright cranky when I clear the table after serving only a salad, cheese, and bread. John Robbins maybe hasn't read the book, Real Men Don't Eat Quiche. Super Wrench has.0 Gisele Ireland, from Bruce County, began her series of humorous columns with The Rural Voice. Her most recent book, Brace Yourself, is available for $7 from Bumps Books, Teeswater, Ontario, NOG 2S0.