Not even going to provide commentary but urge you to read this piece on India’s struggles with hunger. It is amazing (oh wait now I am commenting oh well) how ideology humps itself in there on questions of morality–do we let the market play a role, what can government do, etc. That happens here, too, of course. Earlier this summer I tried to pay for a ferry ticket with a $20 bill, which the ferry guy refused, telling me it was counterfeit. This struck me as supremely absurd. Isn’t money in general just an elaborate charade? If he had accepted the $20, then used it to pay someone else, would it have made any difference? It’s not magic paper, it’s just a mutually-agreed-upon fantasy symbol. Mostly I feel like I think we should just do away with it altogether. Start over with a clean slate. But first, let’s feed everyone.
money changes everything
Egg-o-nomics
So if you buy a $440 chicken coop, and eggs are about $.20/each, that means you’d need to eat 2,200 eggs to recoup (recoop, HAHA) your investment. With two hens each laying an egg a day, you’ll break even in about three years.
—Snacktime
(Disclaimer—that was an educated guess on the price of eggs)