Stew eaters

Stew-eater: (n. From the English, stew, a traditional rural hodge-podge dinner, and from the English, eater, a consumer of solid or semi-solid food.)

Stew-eater is an early 21th-century American English derogatory term for a Libertarian. It is derived from the images of Libertarians in the dystopian children's series, Nadeau and the Corn Revolution, written by Washington, D.C. author Ari D.Goldmann, an imprint of Polar Bear Publishers. In this series, Nadeau is one of the few remaining humans surviving on earth after total environmental collapse. The series begins with Neadeau and her companions waiting to catch the subway in vain. Years of global oceanic and atmospheric abuse have driven humanity away from coastlines and major cities. The remnants of New York is in chaos. As an ideal marriage of political and social values in this new turbulent global community, the only vestige of humanity that has adapted is the Libertarian. Living far away from the flooded coastline cities and with access to the still-thriving rural ecostructure, the Libertarian diet is made up of stew comprised of homegrown vegetables and cured rabbit and other small earthen creatures.
 
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