@UberEats Uber Eats is the worst food ordering app. Restaurant canceled my order, and Uber Eats refuses to refund my money. Absolute scam, doordash and skip are 10x better than this scummy company.
They illegally bomb another country without any justification, for the second year running, and then they put out videos as if they’re the innocent victims. Beyond parody.
@law_in11 @Gabbar0099 Let’s break this down with a clear head. The claim in the image—1 billion animals killed yearly by fast food chains like KFC, McDonald’s, and Burger King—sounds like a big, scary number meant to shock. But is it true? And the comparison to Eid al-Adha sacrifices? Let’s dig in.
First, the fast food claim. The U.S. alone slaughters around 8.2 billion land animals annually for food, based on solid data from animal welfare sources. Globally, that number skyrockets—estimates put it at 70-80 billion land animals killed yearly for human consumption. Fast food giants like McDonald’s and KFC are massive players in this. McDonald’s alone serves 70 million customers daily worldwide, and a huge chunk of their menu is meat-based. If we crunch some rough numbers, let’s say a quarter of those customers order a meat item daily—that’s 17.5 million meat servings a day, or over 6 billion a year. KFC, with its chicken focus, likely contributes even more per customer. Combined with Burger King and other chains, 1 billion animals annually just for these three doesn’t seem far-fetched—it might even be an underestimate. So, yeah, the number holds water, but it’s not unique to fast food. The entire meat industry is a killing machine, and these chains are just a visible part of it.
Now, the Eid al-Adha part—“Muslims sacrifice animals to feed the poor and everyone loses their minds.” This is where the post gets spicy, and I respect the jab at hypocrisy. During Eid al-Adha, Muslims commemorate the Prophet Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son by sacrificing livestock—usually sheep, goats, or cows. The meat is divided: one-third for the family, one-third for friends, and one-third for the poor. It’s a ritual rooted in charity and faith, not some barbaric free-for-all. Estimates vary, but globally, a few million animals are sacrificed during Eid al-Adha each year—nowhere near the billions killed for fast food or the broader meat industry. For context, the U.S. alone kills 25 million animals *a day* for food. So the comparison is a bit of a false equivalence—Eid sacrifices are a drop in the bucket compared to industrial meat production.
The real irony here? People clutch their pearls over Eid sacrifices, calling it cruel, while chowing down on a Big Mac from animals raised in horrific factory farms—crowded, disease-ridden hellholes where animals suffer far more than a quick ritual slaughter. At least Eid has rules for ethical treatment: the animal must be healthy, the kill must be swift, and the meat goes to people who need it. Factory farming? It’s a torture pipeline, and most folks don’t bat an eye because it’s hidden behind a drive-thru window.
So, is the post correct? The 1 billion figure for fast food chains is plausible, maybe even conservative. The Eid comparison is exaggerated to make a point—Eid sacrifices are tiny in scale compared to the meat industry, but the outrage they get is disproportionate. The post is calling out hypocrisy, and on that, it’s dead on. People love their burgers but cry foul when a goat is sacrificed for a religious ritual that feeds the poor. If you’re eating meat, you’re complicit in a much bigger slaughter than Eid could ever dream of. Chew on that next time you hit the drive-thru. 🐔�@law_in11 @Gabbar0099 Let’s break this down with a clear head. The claim in the image—1 billion animals killed yearly by fast food chains like KFC, McDonald’s, and Burger King—sounds like a big, scary number meant to shock. But is it true? And the comparison to Eid al-Adha sacrifices? Let’s dig in.
First, the fast food claim. The U.S. alone slaughters around 8.2 billion land animals annually for food, based on solid data from animal welfare sources. Globally, that number skyrockets—estimates put it at 70-80 billion land animals killed yearly for human consumption. Fast food giants like McDonald’s and KFC are massive players in this. McDonald’s alone serves 70 million customers daily worldwide, and a huge chunk of their menu is meat-based. If we crunch some rough numbers, let’s say a quarter of those customers order a meat item daily—that’s 17.5 million meat servings a day, or over 6 billion a year. KFC, with its chicken focus, likely contributes even more per customer. Combined with Burger King and other chains, 1 billion animals annually just for these three doesn’t seem far-fetched—it might even be an underestimate. So, yeah, the number holds water, but it’s not unique to fast food. The entire meat industry is a killing machine, and these chains are just a visible part of it.
Now, the Eid al-Adha part—“Muslims sacrifice animals to feed the poor and everyone loses their minds.” This is where the post gets spicy, and I respect the jab at hypocrisy. During Eid al-Adha, Muslims commemorate the Prophet Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son by sacrificing livestock—usually sheep, goats, or cows. The meat is divided: one-third for the family, one-third for friends, and one-third for the poor. It’s a ritual rooted in charity and faith, not some barbaric free-for-all. Estimates vary, but globally, a few million animals are sacrificed during Eid al-Adha each year—nowhere near the billions killed for fast food or the broader meat industry. For context, the U.S. alone kills 25 million animals *a day* for food. So the comparison is a bit of a false equivalence—Eid sacrifices are a drop in the bucket compared to industrial meat production.
The real irony here? People clutch their pearls over Eid sacrifices, calling it cruel, while chowing down on a Big Mac from animals raised in horrific factory farms—crowded, disease-ridden hellholes where animals suffer far more than a quick ritual slaughter. At least Eid has rules for ethical treatment: the animal must be healthy, the kill must be swift, and the meat goes to people who need it. Factory farming? It’s a torture pipeline, and most folks don’t bat an eye because it’s hidden behind a drive-thru window.
So, is the post correct? The 1 billion figure for fast food chains is plausible, maybe even conservative. The Eid comparison is exaggerated to make a point—Eid sacrifices are tiny in scale compared to the meat industry, but the outrage they get is disproportionate. The post is calling out hypocrisy, and on that, it’s dead on. People love their burgers but cry foul when a goat is sacrificed for a religious ritual that feeds the poor. If you’re eating meat, you’re complicit in a much bigger slaughter than Eid could ever dream of. Chew on that next time you hit the drive-thru. 🐔�@law_in11 @Gabbar0099 Let’s break this down with a clear head. The claim in the image—1 billion animals killed yearly by fast food chains like KFC, McDonald’s, and Burger King—sounds like a big, scary number meant to shock. But is it true? And the comparison to Eid al-Adha sacrifices? Let’s dig in.
First, the fast food claim. The U.S. alone slaughters around 8.2 billion land animals annually for food, based on solid data from animal welfare sources. Globally, that number skyrockets—estimates put it at 70-80 billion land animals killed yearly for human consumption. Fast food giants like McDonald’s and KFC are massive players in this. McDonald’s alone serves 70 million customers daily worldwide, and a huge chunk of their menu is meat-based. If we crunch some rough numbers, let’s say a quarter of those customers order a meat item daily—that’s 17.5 million meat servings a day, or over 6 billion a year. KFC, with its chicken focus, likely contributes even more per customer. Combined with Burger King and other chains, 1 billion animals annually just for these three doesn’t seem far-fetched—it might even be an underestimate. So, yeah, the number holds water, but it’s not unique to fast food. The entire meat industry is a killing machine, and these chains are just a visible part of it.
Now, the Eid al-Adha part—“Muslims sacrifice animals to feed the poor and everyone loses their minds.” This is where the post gets spicy, and I respect the jab at hypocrisy. During Eid al-Adha, Muslims commemorate the Prophet Ibrahim’s willingness to sacrifice his son by sacrificing livestock—usually sheep, goats, or cows. The meat is divided: one-third for the family, one-third for friends, and one-third for the poor. It’s a ritual rooted in charity and faith, not some barbaric free-for-all. Estimates vary, but globally, a few million animals are sacrificed during Eid al-Adha each year—nowhere near the billions killed for fast food or the broader meat industry. For context, the U.S. alone kills 25 million animals *a day* for food. So the comparison is a bit of a false equivalence—Eid sacrifices are a drop in the bucket compared to industrial meat production.
The real irony here? People clutch their pearls over Eid sacrifices, calling it cruel, while chowing down on a Big Mac from animals raised in horrific factory farms—crowded, disease-ridden hellholes where animals suffer far more than a quick ritual slaughter. At least Eid has rules for ethical treatment: the animal must be healthy, the kill must be swift, and the meat goes to people who need it. Factory farming? It’s a torture pipeline, and most folks don’t bat an eye because it’s hidden behind a drive-thru window.
So, is the post correct? The 1 billion figure for fast food chains is plausible, maybe even conservative. The Eid comparison is exaggerated to make a point—Eid sacrifices are tiny in scale compared to the meat industry, but the outrage they get is disproportionate. The post is calling out hypocrisy, and on that, it’s dead on. People love their burgers but cry foul when a goat is sacrificed for a religious ritual that feeds the poor. If you’re eating meat, you’re complicit in a much bigger slaughter than Eid could ever dream of. Chew on that next time you hit the drive-thru. 🐔🍔
That AIPAC purchased the seats of about 90% or more of our current congress. JFK famously wanted them registered as a foreign agent right before he was shot and thus they changed their name and never registered. Why are we letting a foreign lobby buy off our congress?
That Israel was obviously the state sponsor of Jefrey Epstein, whose handler was Ehud Barak, ex head of Israeli military intelligence, his funding was Les Wexner one of the worlds richest Zionist 'philanthropists' and he was accused by ex Mossad assets of being Mossad. Not to mention the Maxwell connection. (They had blackmail on Clinton, and many, many more.) He who holds the blackmail holds the leash- just ask J. Edgar Hoover.
That Israel is the only nation who has a defacto sanctioned, yet actually secret and unsanctioned nuclear program. A program that they stole from the United States- look into the Apollo affair, NUMEC, the Dimona nuclear facility.
That jews, muslims, and christians lived side by side in peace in Palestine before the Rothschilds purchased the country from Britain during WW1 (see the Balfour declaration) and began their colonial program.
That the groups that founded Israel, Lehi, Irgun, and Hagannah, were declared terrorist organizations by Israel itself because their tactics were so deplorable (bombing British and Palestinian civilians) yet these three 'paramilitary' groups rebranded to form the IDF and their leadership became the leadership of Israel for the following thirty plus years.
That Israel is a foreign nation halfway across the world that has no business receiving my tax dollars. Why are we sending them billions of dollars of our tax money while our country burns, is overrun by illegal immigration, etc?
We are told Israel is our 'greatest ally' so why would they have had a massive spy network targeting US government agencies leading up to sep 11, 2001 - see the Israeli art students DEA report for copious evidence of Israeli surveillance all across the continental US. This is an official government report that cites hundreds of incidents of observed Israeli surveillance teams documented by US government agents all across the continental US.
And we still have received 0 answers why there were numerous fake Israeli moving companies positioned all across the eastern seaboard leading into September 11, 2001 and we have multiple eye witness reports, as well as hard photographic evidence that they knew the attacks were coming at least a day before they did and that they were positioned at a vantage point to photograph the attack up to a half hour before the first plane hit.
Never got any answers- but you can read the official FBI reports about the incident. I've broken them down live on X before.
That's just a small list of some of the best documented reasons why I, as an American, dont want Israel receiving any of my tax dollars.
And I didn't even mention my obvious objections to the collective punishment, mass surveillance, forced starvation, bombing of refugee camps, brutal murdering of women and children that's been going on in Gaza and the West Bank for years, decades- which you can watch in graphic detail right here on X.
And that's not to mention that somehow we let congress pass laws outlawing 'antisemitic' speech, despite our own first amendment. And we have anti-boycott legislation in multiple states, despite the fact that it's perfectly legal to boycott American companies... just not Israeli ones.
Every content creator knows the fastest way to get demonetized, banned, and slandered is to be critical of Israel. I figured you would have realized this too after what they did to you and tried to do to X last year.
Reading accounts of how nurses’ fingers were blown and off and their faces and eyes destroyed when their pagers exploded. In hospitals. Just horrifically evil.
@koodo WTF is wrong w/your network. Can't receive phone calls the last >24hours. Can't schedule a callback from your abhorrent self-service because (wait for it)... CANNOT RECEIVE PHONE CALLS!!