The fake hoopla like you call it is there for a reason.
If you make a study of pork meat you will find that a pork do not have sweat glands and all the toxins stays in their meat. Also pork meat contains worms because of what they eat. In the old days the farmers would use the porks for protection against certain critters and even snakes. The snake couldn’t poison the pork but the pork couldn’t get rid of the poison (no sweat glands) and then the meat was poisonous (literally).
Our pastor’s brother has 4 worms in his brain busy killing him slowly. The doctors recon it is because of pork meat... but I am not a doctor so I can't comment on the plausibility of that.
Maybe the hoopla was there for our protection and because our Creator actually cares about us.
sorry to hear about your pastors brother I hope he gets better, the pork study reminded of the fig tree and issues with that friut...
In Genesis the man and woman covered up with fig leaves did they eat from a fig I'm not sure on that but this fact about fig trees is interesting.
Thekitchn.com
It sounds like a rumor on the elementary school playground: figs have digested wasps in them! Except that unlike most grade school legends, this one is actually true. This week The Atlantic shared a fascinating excerpt from the science blog Oscillator, which explains the symbiotic relationship between certain fig trees and the wasps that pollinate them.
Figs are technically inverted flowers that store their pollen inside the fruits. In order to pollinate the female fruits, the trees have developed a specialized relationship with a type of wasp which burrows inside figs to lay its eggs. After hatching, the baby wasps mate and the males, who are born sharp-toothed but wingless, chew holes through the fig's skin for the winged females' escape. Parenting duties fulfilled, the males die.
The females, pregnant and loaded with pollen, fly to other fig trees and crawl into the fruits to lay their eggs, beginning the cycle anew. The catch? Female figs don't have receptacles for wasp eggs, but the wasps are tricked into climbing in anyway.
As the female wasp slides through the narrow passage in the fig her wings are ripped off (egg laying is a one-way mission) and while she is unsuccessful in laying her eggs, she successfully pollinates the female flower.
The now-flightless wasp is trapped inside the ripening fruit, where it is digested by special enzymes within the fig.