RobL said:
Eating sugar free is a choice. Its a conscious, rational (or irrational) decision made by someone to not eat it for whatever reason. Likewise, me not eating fish is a decision on my part.
Religion isn't like that. Having and following your faith isn't quite like giving something up because of a decision to loose weight or not die from an allergic reaction.
Sure it is -- if it weren't, there wouldn't be atheists -- we'd all be religious, because we would have no choice in it.
Well, its not my fault people don't know what that symbol means. I have not seen it proven that there is some sort of grand conspiracy to keep people from knowing what it is.
Nobody said it's your fault, Rob. :lol: But the deception is proven by the fact that there's nothing on the packaging that says it's kosher in a way that everyone can see at a glance, the way there is with sugar-free, caffeine-free, vegetarian, organic, etc. The symbol's not concealed, but its meaning isn't explicit. It would be like listing the ingredients in little pictograms instead of in words.
Well If a five-year-old Rob can find out what it is (and I wasn't into research when I was five), then really, there isn't much reason for anyone else who is mildly curious about what those little things mean from asking and finding out themselves with minimal work.
And how are people supposed to know there's anything to be curious about? Like I pointed out already, the symbols remotely indicate their meaning.
As for not openly broadcasting that something is for "jewish consumption," history has shown there are a lot of groups that don't like jews for whatever reason.
And they have a right to know what they're buying, as do we all.
Or, maybe the food manufacturers don't think its that big of a deal?
So is that the guiding principle by which we, the consumers, should hold industries accountable? "Yeah, just tell us about the product whatever
you think we need to know."?
As its been argued here, jews make up a smaller percentage of the population, yet, they generally make more money. As such, they produce kosher food for them, but don't openly broadcast it because it isn't that big of a deal to everyone else?
Except that everyone else then (basically) has no choice but to follow Jewish law, unless they've come into the knowledge of what those cryptic symbols on their food mean, which is
not knowledge that's commonly available unless you're specifically looking for it -- and you'd only be specifically looking for it if you already had at least
some idea of what you're looking for.
There are a lot more arguments for the kosher symbol for not being common knowledge then a conspiracy for a tax. I'd just chalk it up to a general ignorance or not caring one way or another what everything on a label means.
That would make sense, except that it's supposedly a big selling point for its market, Jewish people. It makes no sense that a feature that's supposed to bring in more business is denoted by tiny, cryptic symbols, instead of advertised in big, bold plain text as every other specialized food production process is. Face it, Rob, the only logical explanation for the way Kosher production is noted on product packaging is that you have to know what to look for, and if you don't know what to look for, the manufacturers sure as fuck aren't going to tell you. That may not say "conspiracy" to you, but it damned well ought to strike any rational person as being dishonest.