I, for one, think vegan spiking should become a popular sport.
[As pointed out in the original comments, making death threats tells you a lot about someone's true motivation and character.]
A chef who claimed that she "spiked a vegan" has offered her resignation. Laura Goodman, co-owner and head chef at Carlini in Shropshire, faced a backlash over her comments on Facebook about a "pious, judgemental" vegan. Her fiancé and business partner, Michael Gale, said she had received death threats. Mr Gale told the BBC: "She recognises she needs some time away from the business to clear her head and think about what happened."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-shropshire-42552755
Sister blog of Physicists of the Caribbean in which I babble about non-astronomy stuff, because everyone needs a hobby
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Upgrades
Today, a few more thoughts on AI, per some recent upgrades to ChatGPT's image generator. I generally stand by my previous assertions , b...

-
Hmmm. [The comments below include a prime example of someone claiming they're interested in truth but just want higher standard, where...
-
Where Americans think Ukraine is These are the guesses of 2066 Americans as to where Ukraine is. Only 1 in 6 were correct. Presumably the...
-
"The price quoted by Tesla does not include installation of the unit. To this needs to be added the cost of installing solar panels to ...
Would that be a blood-sport?
ReplyDeleteDeath threats by vegans over a vague comment tells you all you need to know about their ethics of not harming animals for food.
ReplyDeleteRather than spiking vegan food I love explaining to them about how the stuff they're eating isn't vegan.