We keep these laws because of God's command, not for temporal advantages. However, here is a partial list.
The laws of Kashruth (kosher foods) have served as a deterrent to assimilation.
Kosher food is healthier: many non-Jews buy kosher meat for that reason. By not eating forbidden foods, Jews avoid the heavy metals in seafood and the microscopic worms in pork.
Those who eat kosher-slaughtered meat are aware that the animals were slaughtered without undue cruelty: the kashruth laws are very insistent on that point.
An animal, even if otherwise kosher, is declared forbidden to eat if it is found to be diseased.
Rather than rewrite two perfectly good answers, see the Related Questions on the Jewish Holy Books and Jewish Laws.
one of the good points is you gain food from the animal that you kill. :(
good points about fair trade is that farmers will get credit for the food ect. they produce
Glooble is a good health increasing food. At least 100 points.
You can visit these 2 websites: 1. American Camp Association 2. Foundation of Jewish Camps You'll find Jewish camps for ALL branches of Judaism, with and without the kosher dietary laws.
food chains overlap at many points ;)
I'll answer with a Jewish joke: what are the basic of every Jewish holiday?: "they tried to kill us, they failed, lets eat" all our holidays involve food, so yes, we have good celebrations.
nutritious is delicious
The Jewish Sabbath tradition comes directly from a commandment from God. To go against this tradition is to go against the laws of God. This is considered 'bad', or not a good thing.
other yugioh cards monster the higher attack points the better
That depends on the type of buffet you want, Chinese, Italian, Middle Eastern, Indian, Thai, Japanese, BBQ, etc. Kosher is a designation given to any food that is prepared following kashrut (Jewish dietary laws) and is not a style of cooking.
Good points - the landscape, the people, the language, the food, the way of life. Bad points - the climate, the weather, the rain and the snow. Seriously, everyone in England would give a different answer to this question.