Here's something Id actually appreciate a rational discussio...

El Guirri

npub1nkn4k86w8advjau7hmxj0j5qx2exxgufu8cqaru7khkdgreym3ks9y3chw

hex

d0645b4ec6cf37a6b080a9bf1410f2687062a3f37326be5cc36343ddf795e14d

nevent

nevent1qqsdqezmfmrv7daxkzq2n0c5zrexsurz50ehxf47tnpkxs7a7727zngprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuem4d36kwatvw5hx6mm9qgsfmf6mra8r7kkfw70tanf8e2qr9vnrywy7ruqw370ttmx5pujdcmgcukz48

Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-06-20T20:06:30Z

↳ 回复 事件不存在

0000e92480c09eebcd867fbabf0bc552f3d69d4af1a18a08ee527192500d62b1...

Here's something Id actually appreciate a rational discussion on. The "free trade agreement" (I know, more government bullshit and not free trade so let's leave that rabbit hole alone) between USA and Europe failed due to enough protest. Europe has a vast list of ingredients that are banned in food because one has to prove an ingredient is safe for human consumption (they still use seed oils but let's ignore that little detail too). USA has a few banned because it has to be proven they're not safe for human consumption which obviously nobody spends the money to check. As someone who doesn't eat packaged food, I don't give a shit quite frankly but it's the question I always have here. I'm not for big government bullshit but I have to be careful when I go to USA because I generally eat out as visiting briefly and literally get sick most visits. From IBS to vomiting. My colleagues are used to me running out of meetings. So if one doesn't have regulations, what is the correct mechanism? Obviously education is failing or not occuring. And don't get me wrong, I think many of my friends in Europe need the regulations cause they're fucking clueless what they're sticking in their bodies too.

原始 JSON

{
  "kind": 1,
  "id": "d0645b4ec6cf37a6b080a9bf1410f2687062a3f37326be5cc36343ddf795e14d",
  "pubkey": "9da75b1f4e3f5ac9779ebecd27ca8032b2632389e1f00e8f9eb5ecd40f24dc6d",
  "created_at": 1781985990,
  "tags": [
    [
      "alt",
      "A short note: Here's something Id actually appreciate a rational..."
    ],
    [
      "e",
      "0000e92480c09eebcd867fbabf0bc552f3d69d4af1a18a08ee527192500d62b1",
      "wss://nostr.wine/",
      "root",
      "8aedc87160819e490cb0162acbd8c9a26d79e63db74f5b1b65939012924a7f05"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "ea57b25f7a57c61d7dd0bf62411244a580d6709e42a20428fd381f89ef8d63db",
      "wss://nostr.wine/"
    ],
    [
      "p",
      "8aedc87160819e490cb0162acbd8c9a26d79e63db74f5b1b65939012924a7f05",
      "wss://relay.damus.io/"
    ],
    [
      "client",
      "Amethyst"
    ]
  ],
  "content": "Here's something Id actually appreciate a rational discussion on. The \"free trade agreement\" (I know, more government bullshit and not free trade so let's leave that rabbit hole alone) between USA and Europe failed due to enough protest. Europe has a vast list of ingredients that are banned in food because one has to prove an ingredient is safe for human consumption (they still use seed oils but let's ignore that little detail too). USA has a few banned because it has to be proven they're not safe for human consumption which obviously nobody spends the money to check. As someone who doesn't eat packaged food, I don't give a shit quite frankly but it's the question I always have here. I'm not for big government bullshit but I have to be careful when I go to USA because I generally eat out as visiting briefly and literally get sick most visits. From IBS to vomiting. My colleagues are used to me running out of meetings. So if one doesn't have regulations, what is the correct mechanism? Obviously education is failing or not occuring. And don't get me wrong, I think many of my friends in Europe need the regulations cause they're fucking clueless what they're sticking in their bodies too. ",
  "sig": "cab90db682784423a0fc280a7941cf088ebcc2855d2eb0507a3319c1f60b44aba442bafaaaf643f922d32657b249dc8741d9bae352f4c4f345261aa4f3b5eac3"
}