Monday, 28 March 2016

Magic Calories


https://www.flickr.com/photos/54397539@N06/5034491496/in/photolist-8ET5Vw-a7yV8W-8hBMF4-YkB1j-76mEo-fUkpvS-bYE5Po-nHCqpA-zo7XSj-7DUbMU-ev15GA-8ET5Mo-7sVmF3-4xeTd2-8r4vkg-6rkgwE-5Epkaw-nLWPs-8EPUba-jYo6tq-8ET5NU-8ETwq9-8ETwnY-4dN2cr-8EPUje-jXGot-4QTuez-ytxtec-skrqEb-nTtjc9-i1tFo-539yXz-31qTw-5jAFK8-z8W1Sg-9E6EC6-8kcvFU-c58iU-8gDXDp-2PxZHe-4Teqj-i1tKF-citv9u-sss5XS-rzzkpo-ndkVLA-4ri3tN-e9p4Vg-ofyFWL-g4YjUX
Ice Cream Cones by gordonramsaysubmissions

What reprehensible property does ice cream have before dinner that it doesn’t have after dinner?
What is this strange ‘ruin your appetite’ thing of which the Grundys of the world speak?
Earlier today, I wrote this in a Facebook discussion:
'What magical property of the calories and nutrients in ice cream at 5:20pm is different from the calories and nutrients in ice cream at 6:45pm?'
Why is popcorn okay at 8:10pm but not 7:45am?
If it's okay to displace x number of calories with nutrition-free (or high calorie, low nutrition density) food, what possible difference can it make to anyone, anywhere, if it is before or after dinner? Or noon? Or the 4th time the earth has rotated around the sun since the cancellation of Firefly?

Does anyone have the answer?

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