Gnutella Forums

Gnutella Forums (https://www.gnutellaforums.com/)
-   Chat - Open Topics - The Lounge (https://www.gnutellaforums.com/chat-open-topics-lounge/)
-   -   Pigs At The Trough - Or, Beloved Leaders Alleviate Famine (https://www.gnutellaforums.com/chat-open-topics-lounge/85924-pigs-trough-beloved-leaders-alleviate-famine.html)

ursula July 9th, 2008 07:42 PM

Pigs At The Trough - Or, Beloved Leaders Alleviate Famine
 
From The Times
July 8, 2008

G8 leaders feast on 8 courses after discussing world food shortages
Philip Webster in Lake Toya, Japan

Food shortages and the need to double African production may dominate the G8 summit but even as they discussed the problems of the developing world yesterday, the leaders of the world’s richest nations, joined by several African leaders, ate course after course of fine food.

In a questionable public relations move, the summit’s Japanese organisers proudly displayed to the press the menus for a sumptuous eight-course banquet laid on last night and a five-course lunch a few hours earlier.

The leaders tucked into truffle soup and crab as they discussed Zimbabwe and aid to Africa’s poorest people. The evening feast of 19 separate dishes included diced fatty flesh of tuna fish and milk-fed lamb with aromatic herbs. Tomorrow, after working up an appetite discussing soaring food prices, the leaders will enjoy a £200 dinner of giant crab, £50-a-kilogram langoustine and sweet clover ice cream, prepared by Michel Bras, a Michelin three-star French chef.

It is all in keeping with a summit that has cost a total of 60 billion yen (£283 million) - enough to have bought 100 million mosquito nets to save Africans from catching malaria - and that frequently seems at odds with the Japanese hosts’ professed theme of ecology and environmentalism.
The International Media Centre, which will be dismantled after the summit, was purpose-built at a cost of £24 million: a total of £8 million a day.
Fibreoptic cables for the press centre have cost a further £43 million. The Japanese Government has completely refurbished the rooms, lawns and carpets of the Windsor Hotel, where the leaders are meeting, and resurfaced much of the perfectly serviceable 100km (60mile) road to the airport.

The public have been kept at least 30 miles from the hotel, which is perched on the top of a mountain overlooking a beautiful volcanic lake. It is protected by 20,000 police officers, air force planes fly regular patrols and coastguard and naval ships are on standby in the nearby bay.

Chefs have been given carte blanche to spend as much as they like on their menus, which yesterday had the theme of Hokkaido, Blessings of the Earth and the Sea, after the northernmost Japanese island where the summit is being held.

A menu issued yesterday proudly boasted that the chefs "know everything that there is to know about food in Hokkaido". It added: "The three specialists will make the best of Hokkaido’s natural blessings, supported by higher quality ingredients, more natural ingredients and the soil with which to enjoy them."

Yesterday’s dishes were prepared by Katsuhiro Nakamura, the first Japanese to win a Michelin star, who was brought out of retirement for the summit. He was hired as the "grand chef" by the Windsor Hotel, where the Presidential Suite costs £7,000 a night.



On Sunday Gordon Brown advised householders at home not to waste food as the world copes with a shortage. He said that ending food waste could save families £8 a week. The Prime Minister’s aides insisted that the aim of his message was not to hector people.



Andrew Mitchell, the Shadow International Development Secretary, said last night: "The G8 have made a bad start to their summit, with excessive cost and lavish consumption. Surely it is not unreasonable for each leader to give a guarantee that they will stand by their solemn pledges of three years ago at Gleneagles to help the world’s poor. All of us are watching, waiting and listening."

Dominic Nutt, of Save the Children, said: "It is deeply hypocritical [that] they should be lavishing course after course on world leaders when there is a food crisis and millions cannot afford to eat."


The menus in full

Dinner

Corn-stuffed caviar (Now, THAT must be labour-intensive ! I mean, what does one do to stuff some corn into a sturgeons egg, hmmm ? Nano-Surgery, at least !)

Smoked salmon and sea urchin "pain surprise" style (Remember, boys and girls, NEVER eat ANYTHING with the word surprise in the menu !)

Hot onion tart (Wondered what Margaret Thatcher was down to... !)

Winter lily bulb and summer savoury
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Folding fan modelled tray decorated with bamboo grasses
including

Kelp-flavoured cold Kyoto beef "shabu-shabu", asparagus dressed with sesame cream

Diced fatty flesh of tuna fish, avocado and jellied soy sauce and Japanese herb "shiso"

Boiled clam, tomato, "shiso" in jellied clear soup of clam

Water shield and pickled conger dressed with vinegar soy sauce

Boiled prawn with jellied tosazu vinegar

Grilled eel rolled around burdock strip

Sweet potato

Fried and seasoned Goby with soy sauce and sugar
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hairy Crab "Kegani" bisque soup (Almost sounds like something one might get in their sophomore year !)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Salt-grilled bighand thornyhead with vinegary water pepper sauce
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Milk fed "shiranuka" lamb flavoured with aromatic herbs and mustard

Roasted lamb and cepes and black truffle with emulsion sauce of lamb's stock and pine seed oil
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Special cheese selection, lavender honey and caramelised nuts
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G8 fantasy dessert (Beggars the imagination, eh ?)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coffee served with candied fruits and vegetables



Wine List

Le Reve grand cru champagne
Japanese saki
Corton Charlemagne 2005
Chateau Latour burgundy (Oooooops ! Sacré bleu ! Médoc from Burgundy ?)
Ridge California Monte Bello 1997
Tokaji Essencia 1999 from Hungary (Possibly the nicest and rarest item on the carte !)



Isn't that nice ?


Whine list
Remember, gang... These are the scum that you and/or your parents put into positions of power.

It's all your fault.

Of course, NONE of them actually have any real power... They are merely psycopaths who are are so deeply disturbed that they are willing to act as public mouthpieces AND TARGETS for those who actually run the circus.
Is that crazy or what ?


The above references are NOT unusual.
This is how these beloved 'leaders' exercise their hypocrisy, 24/7.

Peerless July 10th, 2008 03:56 PM

to say its the fault of the voters is very relative....when a person votes for a candidate in good faith (ok, being foolish enough to believe in their 'platform') and said candidate proceeds to totally ignore the mandate of the people...well...huh...

IMHO Bush and all his cronies should be tried for treason and hanged....in a real world they would and would be found guilty as sin, because they are....

but we don't live in a 'real' world...its controlled by corporations and manipulated electronic voting machines...in some cases, yes the people vote for the wrong person...but when things are manipulated to get that wrong person in office, can you really blame the populace?

let's face it..the only real solution is a million man march on Washington DC with every marcher armed and ready to take back the nation...and considering the new technologies the military has at its disposal, I truly believe its too late for even that...out best hope is to pray that there really was a man who walked on water and that he makes a second appearance mighty soon...that type of human would hopefully just make the evil corrupt pieces of sh!t that populate the halls of congress simply go away ala Michael Valentine Smith from Stranger in a Strange Land


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 08:52 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
SEO by vBSEO 3.6.0 ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.

Copyright © 2020 Gnutella Forums.
All Rights Reserved.