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British Food Journal Volume 78 Issue 5 1976

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 1 May 1976

175

Abstract

The way of thought and vision and memory is that they often come upon you unexpectedly, presenting nothing new but usually with a clarity and emphasis that it all seems new. This will sometimes happen after a long period of indecision or when things are extremely difficult, as they have long been for the country, in most homes and among ordinary individuals. Watching one's life savings dwindle away, the nest‐egg laid down for security in an uncertain world, is a frightening process. This has happened to the nation, once the richest in the world, and ot its elderly people, most of them taught the habit of saving in early youth. We are also taught that what has been is past changing; the clock cannot be put back, and the largesse—much of it going to unprincipled spongers—distributed by a spendthrift Government as token relief is no answer, not even to present difficulties. The response can only come by a change of heart in those whose brutal selfishness have caused it all; and this may be a long time in coming. In the meantime, it is a useful exercise to consider our assets, to recognize those which must be protected at all costs and upon which, when sanity returns, the future depends.

Citation

(1976), "British Food Journal Volume 78 Issue 5 1976", British Food Journal, Vol. 78 No. 5, pp. 129-160. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011712

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1976, MCB UP Limited

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