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Life

Life | 29 July 2020

The Fat of the Land

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The mass consumption of animals has a deep, underlying presence in our current troubles, from the role factory farming plays in increasing the likelihood of pandemic outbreaks to the panic buying of meat products as a fear response. So it's timely to consider how disconnected we are from the origins of the food we eat. This Broadsheet piece, published six years ago, profiles self-sufficiency advocate Rohan Anderson and his push for a more honest approach to the food that sustains us.

I’m standing in Rohan Anderson’s paddock, holding a small rabbit that two minutes earlier was enjoying being alive. It is now bloody, lifeless and missing half its face.

Anderson approvingly calls the animal he just shot a, “New-season rabbit.” But from what I can see that’s just a nicer way of saying “baby bunny”.

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What We're Talking About

If you have a dig around, you’ll find that Firescribe is chock full of hidden treasure on a wide range of topics (because we’re interested in a *lot* of different things). Click on the tags below to start exploring.

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Life | 18 June 2020

Consider this before you share your kids' photos on social media without their consent

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In the 1920s, experts told parents that they should touch their children as little as humanly possible, lest they grow up to be unwieldy brats.

"Never hug and kiss them or let them sit on your lap," wrote behaviourist John Watson, in the 1928 book Psychological Care of the Infant and Child.

"Shake hands with them in the morning. Give them a pat on the head if they have made an extraordinarily good job of a difficult task. If you must, kiss them once on the forehead when they say goodnight."

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