๐Ÿฅฉ๐Ÿ—๐Ÿ–๐Ÿ”๐Ÿ„๐ŸฎWHEN DID MEAT BECOME RIGHT WING? Saturday Salon #3

๐Ÿฅฉ๐Ÿ—๐Ÿ–๐Ÿ”๐Ÿ„๐ŸฎWHEN DID MEAT BECOME RIGHT WING? Saturday Salon #3

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31 May 2025ย ย ย ย 
13:00 - 17:00

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Lets read and discuss today’s article

WHEN DID MEAT BECOME RIGHT-WING?
10โ€“12 minute read / 1665 words

In America, there are two famous vampires named Brian Johnson. Well, sort of. The first, who admittedly spells it โ€œBryanโ€, is the preternaturally ageless tech entrepreneur who charts his erections and uses infusions of his teenage sonโ€™s blood plasma in pursuit of eternal youth โ€” and has ended up looking somewhere freakishly in between 38 and 80. The other resembles a man-beast with Neolithic coiffure, always baring a mahogany, bulging breast, often chomping on the still-beating heart of some poor animal or other. This Brian is better known by another name: Liver King.

This throbbing Johnson is the subject of a Netflix documentary released today; on the surface, he is a fitness influencer and food-supplement manufacturer. His myth, however, has outgrown these titles, and as such he has self-coronated as Liver King for his love of offal. He puts away around a pound of raw liver a day, coaching his fans (or โ€œprimalsโ€) to slowly build up to his stomach-churning levels. His ethos, which he summarises as โ€œWhy eat vegetables when you can eat testicles?โ€, is a grotesque literalisation of the old โ€œyou are what you eatโ€ mindset. Helped along by a โ€œdegree in biochemistryโ€, Johnson rationalises that you can subsume a beastโ€™s masculinity by consuming its balls: โ€œVegetables donโ€™t have the raw material required to produce a healthy set of testicles. Testicles do,โ€ he tells GQ.

His extreme lifestyle has reaped rewards. He hawks supplements which bring in an annual income of more than $100 million, according to The Guardian; unfortunately, as fellow sovereign Tiger King could have told him, allowing a Netflix documentary crew into your compound risks gaining you a little more exposure than anticipated. Predictably, the film promises to rumble Johnsonโ€™s ruse: alongside all the Nosferatu nosh, heโ€™s been shooting up steroids. Loads of them, costing $11,000 a month.

Itโ€™s a shame really, as my mouse had been hovering over the checkout button for a box of LKโ€™s โ€œnutritional food barsโ€ on Amazon. Who wouldnโ€™t want to look, as my farming-stock family would put it, like an โ€œupright bullโ€? Besides, his promises are borderline magical: beef liver products are โ€œnatureโ€™s most nutrient-dense foodโ€ and they also happen to โ€œtaste like dessertโ€. Looking at the reviews, the โ€œdessertโ€ in question must be โ€œdog foodโ€, โ€œsawdustโ€ or โ€œgasolineโ€ โ€” but no pain, no gain.

While todayโ€™s documentary might spell the end of the Liver King food range, his ethos, and the sanguineous slab of the manosphere he represents, is going nowhere. The bro-ification of food is after all a fascinating new dimension to modern masculinity, which has seen anti-vaxxer and โ€œmake America healthy againโ€ evangelist RFK Jr and his Right-wing disciples settle upon Big Burger as an agent of national decline. โ€œWe are betraying our children by letting [food] industries poison them,โ€ Kennedy told a rally in November; โ€œsugar is poisonโ€, he clarified last month. He has a point: American food standards are notoriously lax, and emerging evidence on ultra-processed foods, staples of the American diet, does suggest a high health cost to conveyor belts of the cheap and tasty.

โ€œThe bro-ification of food is a fascinating new dimension to modern masculinity.โ€

Read the full article here:
WHEN DID MEAT BECOME RIGHT-WING?
10โ€“12 minute read / 1665 words

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