Not for KFC, but for conscience.

by ydniu9g8 on 2012-02-18 14:24:33

Not for KFC, but for conscience. ----------- An ordinary person's indignation One day, QQ flashed again. A parent of a classmate of the child's school posted an article in the group. After reading it, I felt cold all over... My goodness... How could such a thing happen? The general content of the article is as follows: A senior leader of Bank of China in a certain city visited the chicken factory of KFC due to work exchanges. That is a place with serious confidentiality. Each chicken has tubes inserted all over its body. The time from hatching to finished chicken is two weeks. They are injected with hormones! There are no feathers on each chicken, just like the chickens we see after they have been gutted and plucked! Almost every chicken has 4-6 wings and 4-6 legs. The author said excitedly: "There are especially many Chinese children in KFC. What if KFC has developed hormone-catalyzed technology for the Chinese that can make chickens grow multiple legs and wings. What if foreigners make huge profits while our physical health and the health of our offspring are greatly harmed! What if children now are relatively obese because they eat these hormone-laden junk foods!" After reading the article, my wife looked worried and said that we must never take our child to KFC in the future. As a science and technology worker for more than twenty years, I suddenly felt very uncomfortable. Although I am not a biologist, I still understand the current scientific development quite well. The more I think about it, the more suspicious points I find: First, there are not only Chinese people in KFC, but also many foreigners. There are often foreigners in the KFC near my house. Of course, in KFC restaurants opened in China, Chinese people are still the mainstream. Otherwise, why would others come here to do business? Second, the United States is indeed leading in top-notch biotechnology, but such leading technology is often at the laboratory stage. China is also considered a major country in breeding technology. According to KFC's consumption volume, this kind of chicken must have been mass-produced, it is impossible to still be at the laboratory level. Therefore, if KFC has already mass-produced this 6-winged chicken, then within two years at most, profit-driven merchants may spread this project all over China. To verify this idea, I immediately called Lao Xia, who graduated from Fudan University in 1993 and has always been a wise figure in my circle of friends. "Man, how can you believe in such things! The current fast-growing chicken technology generally takes 43 days to go to market. Wanting to go to market in ten days is simply a dream. Most importantly, fast-growing chickens must be raised in black lanterns, not in the wild as shown in the pictures. The cost would be too high." "I say, Old Ding, you'd better spend your spare time thinking about the lottery on 'Yidining Lottery Network' instead of bothering me with such nonsense in the future." After hanging up, Lao Xia didn't forget to insult me. After putting down the phone, I felt reassured, but also very angry, really angry. I don't have any particular fondness for KFC, nor do I particularly dislike it. It's infuriating to almost fall for something like this. Turning on the computer, it seems like you can see anything, but at the same time, it seems like you can't trust more and more things. Skimming through the news casually, the stock market doesn't seem to have improved yet, and Hong Kong has been restless recently. None of these things concern me. Fine, input WWW.YDNIU.COM in the address bar, and follow the doubling investment as Lao Xia said.