> A commenter added the source, and some more quote:
>
> Akilano Akiwumi-Assani
>
> p.467, The Principle of Hope v.II, 'Malthus, birth-rate, nourishment' -
> and the preceding passage - "All in all, even without grotesque visions,
> every organic desire for improvement remains up in the air if the social
> one is not acknowledged and taken into account. Health is a social concept,
> exactly like the organic existence in general of human beings, as human
> beings. Thus it can only be meaningfully increased at all if the life in
> which it stands is not itself overcrowded with anxiety, deprivation and
> death" Bloch wrote the Principle of Hope in Cambridge Mass during the Great
> Depression ('38-'47) , he was blacklisted and his wife, an architect, ended
> up working in kitchens to support them. Scuppie rustica consumer
> sovereignty movements are nauseating against such a backdrop.
>
I have no argument with the last bit, at least insofar as those movements are supposed to substitute politics. But I think Malcolm Emerich's quip about "war on christmas style food posts" captures something. And for the record I am not, nor have I ever been, a vegetarian.
-- Andy "It's a testament to ketchup that there can be no confusion."