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- Path: sparky!uunet!portal!lll-winken!fnnews.fnal.gov!mp.cs.niu.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.iastate.edu!sballant
- From: sballant@iastate.edu (Susan Ballantine)
- Newsgroups: sci.econ,soc.culture.usa,soc.culture.japan,soc.culture.british,soc.culture.canada
- Subject: Re: US as No. 1 (3 data books)
- Message-ID: <C1HGr8.DD8@news.iastate.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 22:49:55 GMT
- References: <rdavis.728008225@connie.de.convex.com> <1993Jan26.120132.21873@cas.org> <1993Jan26.172037.2804@adobe.com>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames, IA
- Lines: 42
-
- In article <1993Jan26.172037.2804@adobe.com> cjackson@adobe.com (Curtis Jackson) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan26.120132.21873@cas.org> jac54@cas.org () writes:
- >} Going back to food, the U.S. offers some of the worst sausage
- >} it has ever been my dubious privilege to taste. Oscar Meyer
- >} would cause riots in the streets in Poland, never mind Germany.
- >
- >Ah, but that is our *chief* advantage, you see. The unwashed masses
- >may eat Oscar Meyer sausages, drink Budweiser beer, and eat Velveeta
- >brand processed American cheese-like (not!) food-style product, but
- >I don't. And why not? BECAUSE I DON'T HAVE TO, here in the SF bay
- >area.
- >
- >What America lacks in the large commercial advertised arena it more
- >than makes up for in small local businesses, many of them run by
- >Nth-generation immigrants, where N is a small number. So I get my
- >sausages at one of several local German delis, I get my beer from
- >local microbreweries, and I get my cheese from local organic dairies.
- >I also get my Thai food at restaurants run by Thai immigrants, my
- >Vietnamese food at Vietnamese-run restaurants, and my Japanese cooking
- >ingredients at a large local Japanese-run grocery.
- >
- >I have these wonderful nearly-infinite choices of locally-produced
- >good quality foods, yet I still have the advantage of the electronics
- >and clothing and myriad other consumer goods mass-produced in this
- >country. So the American advantage is that the things we lack on a
- >national scale can usually be made here by small businesses run by
- >people who know how to do them right, whereas the things that Europe
- >lacks would require huge capital investment and large factories.
- >
- >And, yes, Iowa is horrible, but America is so huge and diverse (despite
- >the raging on-slaught of generic television and fast food franchises)
- >that one can choose to live in some place almost, but not quite,
- >completely unlike Iowa, yet remain in the same country.
- >--
- >Curtis Jackson '91 Black Lab/Blue Heeler "Studley Doright"
- >cjackson@mv.us.adobe.com '92 Collie/Golden "George"
- >DoD #721 KotB '91 Hawk GT '81 Maxim 650
- >"I'd rather die while I'm living than live while I'm dead." -- J. Buffett
- At risk of being flamed off the net by all these midewest-haters, I'd like
- to firmly assert that Iowa is really not too bad.
- sue b.
- iowa state u.
-