Howdy! Thanks for joining me here at T30DLV. Though the diet is over, the project continues. Ultimately, nothing was truly ever about the diet, but what concerns it represented and what brainwaves it riled.
I know many of you are coming from Katherine Jones' excellent article in today's Idaho Statesman (found here). Thanks. I appreciate that. I appreciate your willingness to listen, read, and, hopefully, engage. I'm going to be updating the last week of my diet as soon as I get time (which will be within the next two weeks). For now, though, visit the archives. There is plenty of thought-fodder to be found in the prior 20+ days of nonsensical blogging.
But, check back in the coming weeks and I'll have more. I promise. And I expect others to hold me to that promise. I'm in the process of visiting Alaska (leaving Sunday) and moving to Denver (early August), but I'll update this as soon and as regularly as possible.
Again, thanks for stopping by. I hope you discover something. Whether it's about yourself, the world, or your place in it, remember that you inevitably make an impact. That fact is out of your control. But, you can choose what impact you make.
What have you done today to change the world?
BJB
Homework: Humanitarians cool on G8 summit response to food crisis.

3 comments:
I have spread the word...like a good citizen...and a better friend. :)
Like you, I've found that veganism can address many of the world's problems -- hunger, energy consumption, water pollution & consumption, cruel/horrific practices, and global warming. The ripple impact has even a broader scope. If anyone is looking for a tangible way to decrease harm to the planet, he or she can simply reduce consumption of animal products. I read about your blog in the Idaho Statesman this morning and applaud you getting this message out. If the average person would eliminate meat from their diet with regularity (say, twice a week) it would have a measurable impact and would encourage similar initiative.
Thanks again! :)
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