Word: sided
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...night of beef eating and male bonding: "It's every caveman for himself, clasping his meat like a hunk of mastodon, gnawing flesh that resists seductively before it yields, squirting fluids red with blood and fat over my hands and down my chin...Elbows out, the men sitting either side of me lunge for the platter to see who can sop up the most sauce with their bread and fill their triple-sized shot glasses from the bottles of Maker's Mark that line the tables, to see who can toss down the most boilermakers. This meal...
Fussell's more focused book limits itself to American beef, but somehow feels more expansive and ambitious. In puncturing mythology of the West, she pits The Cowboy against The Machine: On one side are the old-timers, so in love with nostalgic ideals of land and horizon and freedom that they fail to realize that the cattle industry is a rich man's game, made for those on the other side with the money, fuel and machinery that go into making cattle so profitable. Like Beef, and many books before it, Raising Steaks reminds us that as tasty as burgers...
...just releasing this music and waiting to be sued. And that's so far from the truth. Mike Doyle speaking on our behalf was kind of like, "In your face! Here's a politician who's backing us." It was just great to have someone that legitimate on our side for once...
...Such pain is the flip side of globalization: the world is now so interconnected that trouble in one place, especially somewhere as economically powerful as the U.S., can and does easily spread elsewhere. For a while, Turks - like Chinese, Brazilians, Indians, Hungarians and others - thought their buoyant domestic growth could insulate them from a downturn in the U.S. and Western Europe. Now they're discovering that it can't. "A lot of us gave credence to 'decoupling,' " says Ümit Boyner, who together with her husband runs a big Turkish retail empire. "Looking ahead, we're wondering...
...makes sense that now he would do things differently. Just two weeks before Election Day, Obama has decided to leave his campaign to be by his grandmother's side in Honolulu for two days later this week. Madelyn Dunham, 86, is gravely ill, although the campaign has not released details about her condition. Dunham is Obama's last living parental figure, and by his own accounts, she played as big a role in his upbringing as his mother...