Philosophy: Should we eat meat?

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In summary, some people believe that we should stop eating meat because it's cruel to kill other life forms, while others argue that we should continue eating meat because the world's population is expanding rapidly and we need to eat to survive. Vegans have many benefits over vegetarians, including the freedom to eat more healthy food, no need to cut any animal bodies or organs, and the fact that they're helping to protect animals that are about to be extinct. There is also the argument that the world would be much healthier if we all became vegetarians, but this is not a popular opinion. The poll results do not seem to be clear-cut, with some people wanting to stop eating meat and others preferring to continue eating meat as

Should we eat meat?

  • Yes

    Votes: 233 68.5%
  • No

    Votes: 107 31.5%

  • Total voters
    340
  • #316
Växan said:
there is no evidence against all life being sentient
You realize this statement is false if there is even one iota of evidence against all life being sentient? If you wanted a position you had a chance of supporting, you should have said that there was insufficient evidence against all life being sentient. You've shown that you're less interested in coming to a logical conclusion than simply being right.
Växan said:
how can anyone know if insects, micro organisms and plant life are sentient or not? they communicate in ways very different from humans
Humans in Papua New Guinea communicate very differently from humans in North America, but when a new tribe is discovered with a new language the lines of communciation are established very, very quickly.
Växan said:
i have no doubt that all animals are sentient

anyone who has ever tried to catch a fly is aware that they think and react as a sentient being
Anyone who reads this statement is aware that you don't understand what sentient means. A robot can react as efficiently or more efficiently than a fly. I can write a computer program in a matter of minutes that would mimick any insect alive. Having an instinct for evasion is no basis for sentience.
Växan said:
everything that lives seems to operate with a purpose, and also are aware of their own existence since they work very hard to defend it
Working to defend one's existence does not show awareness either. As robotics become more and more complex, they will almost definitely be programmed to defend their existence at least to a certain extent, so that they last longer and thus are more efficient at what they do. From an evolutionary point of view, basically everything that is alive today had to by definition work to defend its existence or it wouldn't be around. Self-preservation is not any reason for sentience.
Växan said:
plants 'seem' to be inanimate, however if you view them in time-lapse photography they are quite animated - they just move slower than we do

they derive their nutrition from sunlight and nitrogen in the soil (thanks to bacteria) so they don't need to run around on legs to find food like hysterical animals do

there are living trees that are 1000's of years old!
have they become wise? it's impossible to know
This is a point for me, not for you. If you eat plants even though you think they could be aware, why not eat animals? The logical gap in your thinking is astounding.
Växan said:
it's true that death is a part of life (nature's way of preventing overpopulation)

some geneticists are desparately trying to find the elusive 'death gene', hoping to switch it off in humans
There need not be any 'death gene.' Things naturally tend toward corruption and aging over the course of their existence due to the law of entropy.
Växan said:
most humans view themselves as above all other life
somehow more worthy of life than others
Or just as sentient, and science seems to back us up on that one.
Växan said:
i wonder if this view would hold - if humans had a better understanding of non-human intelligence

what if Dolphins, Porpoises and Whales (for example) are more intelligent than humans?
Then you'd think they'd figure out a way to defeat the whalers and fishermen who hunt them. Even a basic manoeuvre like getting a big group together and attacking one of the boats, pushing on one side and tipping it over or something. But no, they don't.
Växan said:
i think they're very aware of our intelligence
Despite all the scientific evidence to the contrary, of course.

Everything I pointed out in my reply to Dissident Dan applies equally here. The basic 'symptoms' that would be required to demonstrate the sentience of any computer or robot are lacking in animals. Even if you claim that's only a tiny iota of evidence, your original position that there is no evience whatsoever against all life being sentient has been disproven.

Also, even if all life were sentient, there are many, many animals who eat other animals. Why shouldn't we? Take bears, for example. Their anatomy is such that they could survive only on vegetable matter. But they choose to eat meat(if we believe they are sentient). So does every other carnivorous animal in the world. If they, as sentient beings, could justify it to themselves, why can't we as sentient beings do the same thing?

sincerely,
jeffceth
 
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  • #317
By sentient, I mean having the ability for subjective experience (feeling, emotion). All the animals that we generally think of can experience and are aware. There is no relevant difference between humans and other animals when looking for evidence of the basic quality of sentience. Our emotions are more related to the "lower" parts of our brains (such as the hypothalamus and the rest of the limbic system) that all animals from fish to reptiles to amphibians to birds to mammals have, rather than our enlarged neocortexes.

I do not understand why you say that other species cannot communicate with us, have no forms of self-expression, and don't advance. I communicate with my dogs on a regular basis. Apes have been taught sign language. Those who research apes in the wild have discovered technological differences between different groups of the same species (advancement).

Everything animals that I have had contact with do is evidence of their awareness. They have understanding of what is pleasant and painful to them, and they protect themselves. They have understanding of their environment. They react to different people and different situations in different ways.

Intelligence is not the important criterion. The ability to experience (sentience) is the important criterion. Sure, humans are obviously able to learn faster, but that is not relevant. If it was, then we should not care about severely mentally-handicapped people, right?
 
  • #318
Dissident Dan said:
By sentient, I mean having the ability for subjective experience (feeling, emotion). All the animals that we generally think of can experience and are aware. There is no relevant difference between humans and other animals when looking for evidence of the basic quality of sentience. Our emotions are more related to the "lower" parts of our brains (such as the hypothalamus and the rest of the limbic system) that all animals from fish to reptiles to amphibians to birds to mammals have, rather than our enlarged neocortexes.
The emotions have never been isolated to a specific part of the brain, and even more importantly, people who have had these parts of their brain lost or damaged, ie through hydroencephalopathy, have still exhibited emotions, communication, etc.
Dissident Dan said:
I do not understand why you say that other species cannot communicate with us, have no forms of self-expression, and don't advance. I communicate with my dogs on a regular basis.
Has your 'communication' ever branched into discussing something you'd never discussed before through the dog's initiation? If not, it's more than likely you've just conditioned one specific type of stimulus-response.
Dissident Dan said:
Apes have been taught sign language.
Sure they have. I've seen the 'communication' of koko the gorrila and others. The vast majority of the scientific community is of the opinion that the communication lies in the sign-language interpreter. Have you read any of the transcripts? Sometimes koko says something like 'nipple' and the interpetery says she's thinking of the rhyming word 'people' and ould like to welcome everyone. It's just wishful thinking.
Dissident Dan said:
Those who research apes in the wild have discovered technological differences between different groups of the same species (advancement).
I have never heard of any species acting different in a technological sense except by environmental constraints, ie can't use straws to catch termites when you lack either straws or termites, etc. If you have any actual information other than this vague assertion, feel free to post it and I'll consider it. However, it seems to me that this type of thing would have been groundbreaking enough that I would have heard about it.
Dissident Dan said:
Everything animals that I have had contact with do is evidence of their awareness. They have understanding of what is pleasant and painful to them, and they protect themselves. They have understanding of their environment. They react to different people and different situations in different ways.
There is no evidence that they have understandings of these things simply because they do them. I can create a computer program which would mimick the behaviour of any of the simpler animals or even an entirely new species of my own creation which would respond differently or positive and negative stimulus, adapt to its environment, protect itself and its progeny, etc. Yet most people would agree that such a computer program would not be sentient.
Dissident Dan said:
Intelligence is not the important criterion. The ability to experience (sentience) is the important criterion. Sure, humans are obviously able to learn faster, but that is not relevant. If it was, then we should not care about severely mentally-handicapped people, right?
Severely mentally-handicapped people still exhibit a much higher level of intelligence than animals. They learn to communicate with language, learn new things, express themselves, etc. You'd be surprised at the depth and abilities of the severely handicapped. They're much more advanced than animals.

sincerely,
jeffceth
 
  • #319
You realize this statement is false if there is even one iota of evidence against all life being sentient? If you wanted a position you had a chance of supporting, you should have said that there was insufficient evidence against all life being sentient. You've shown that you're less interested in coming to a logical conclusion than simply being right.

you seem to be more concerned with winning an argument than i am

i would rather raise some good questions, than claim to have all the answers

Humans in Papua New Guinea communicate very differently from humans in North America, but when a new tribe is discovered with a new language the lines of communciation are established very, very quickly.

this is an illiogical analogy, of course humans can adapt to other languages
humans are designed to use language for communication

other lifeforms may use chemical changes to communicate
or ultrasound, or complex low frequency oscillations, the possibilities are endless

Anyone who reads this statement is aware that you don't understand what sentient means.

im quite aware of what sentient means

here is the definition:

sentient

adj 1: endowed with feeling and consciousness, self awareness

so what part don't you understand?


A robot can react as efficiently or more efficiently than a fly. I can write a computer program in a matter of minutes that would mimick any insect alive. .

no, you can't... and you insult our intelligence by claiming that you can

robotics are not up to the level of the most retarded insect
even the robotics group at MIT can't match the abilities of a common housefly

Working to defend one's existence does not show awareness either.

prove it


This is a point for me, not for you. If you eat plants even though you think they could be aware, why not eat animals? The logical gap in your thinking is astounding.

i am not a vegetarian for philosophical reasons
animal protein is unhealthy and vegetable protein is not

it's also possible to live on fruit and fruit vegetables without killing plants

There need not be any 'death gene.' Things naturally tend toward corruption and aging over the course of their existence due to the law of entropy.

the population inversion of energy states in a laser violates entropy, therefore entropy is not a law

Or just as sentient, and science seems to back us up on that one.
what science are you referring to specifically?

Then you'd think they'd figure out a way to defeat the whalers and fishermen who hunt them. Even a basic manoeuvre like getting a big group together and attacking one of the boats, pushing on one side and tipping it over or something. But no, they don't.

you obviously have never studied the history of whaling
whales have capsized ships

and dolphins are not an aggressive species
humans are *******s by nature

i think they're very aware of our intelligence
Despite all the scientific evidence to the contrary, of course.

what evidence? post the scientific evidence to the contrary here

Everything I pointed out in my reply to Dissident Dan applies equally here. The basic 'symptoms' that would be required to demonstrate the sentience of any computer or robot are lacking in animals.

the most powerful computer on the planet does not even approach 1% the potential brain power of a rat

Also, even if all life were sentient, there are many, many animals who eat other animals. Why shouldn't we? Take bears, for example. Their anatomy is such that they could survive only on vegetable matter. But they choose to eat meat(if we believe they are sentient). So does every other carnivorous animal in the world. If they, as sentient beings, could justify it to themselves, why can't we as sentient beings do the same thing?

animals play, as humans play, and the act of playing clearly demonstrates that they are indeed sentient

humans measure everything by their own standards
but humans in truth are neither capable of self understanding
nor mutual understanding of their fellow humans

your case for justifying the exploitation of animals as food
is based on the statement - if it's ok for animals to eat other animals
and animals are sentient, therefore it's ok for humans to eat animals

humans are the only animal which hunts to extinction
and especially just for sport
the only animal which force breeds and genetically modifies other species
for profit (cash)
the only animal which conducts cruel experiments on other species to satisfy it's own lack of real knowledge and pseudo-scientific sadism
the only animal that taunts, tortures and mutilates other animals for the sake of sadistic pleasure
the only animal that pretends to be wise, respectable, intelligent, knowledgeable, and even devine and godlike in the face of it's own ignorance
and depravity

i believe that animal inteligence excedes human intelligence
humans are just too stupid to interpret the language

brain size has been used as an argument for human superiority
but there are several species with larger brains than humans

humans are the only animal that cannot thrive or even survive without artificial means

a naked human is no match in battle against 90% of the world's species
humans are weak and vulnerable, and make up for this insecurity with an inflated ego and big guns

the most pathetic animal of all
 
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  • #320
jeffceth said:
The emotions have never been isolated to a specific part of the brain, and even more importantly, people who have had these parts of their brain lost or damaged, ie through hydroencephalopathy, have still exhibited emotions, communication, etc.

I didn't say that specifically, the hypothalamus, or any other such specific region is solely responsible. Mentioned the limbic system, which is composed of many different such parts. Researchers have done much work that strongly shows the correlations between different brain regions and different emotional states. The brain regions most involved are those of the hindbrain and midbrain.

Has your 'communication' ever branched into discussing something you'd never discussed before through the dog's initiation? If not, it's more than likely you've just conditioned one specific type of stimulus-response.

One example: When my dog is hungry or thirsty, she will scratch her bowl. I did not teach her to do this. She started doing it completely on her own. If I do not respond soon enough, she will start barking, or perhaps walk over to me to gain my attention, and then perhaps return to her bowl. There are many subleties and variations that tell me that she is trying to gain my attention. While these activities are surely reinforced by my behavior, just as my behavior reinforces the behavior of other humans, these actions were not in any way induced in me in the first place. I did not inspire any of the various tactics used.

I have never heard of any species acting different in a technological sense except by environmental constraints, ie can't use straws to catch termites when you lack either straws or termites, etc. If you have any actual information other than this vague assertion, feel free to post it and I'll consider it. However, it seems to me that this type of thing would have been groundbreaking enough that I would have heard about it.

This is the best I could find for now:

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2002-05/gwu-ajr051602.php
http://wvwv.essortment.com/primatesmammal_rrtr.htm

There is no evidence that they have understandings of these things simply because they do them. I can create a computer program which would mimick the behaviour of any of the simpler animals or even an entirely new species of my own creation which would respond differently or positive and negative stimulus, adapt to its environment, protect itself and its progeny, etc. Yet most people would agree that such a computer program would not be sentient.

As vaxan said.

Severely mentally-handicapped people still exhibit a much higher level of intelligence than animals. They learn to communicate with language, learn new things, express themselves, etc. You'd be surprised at the depth and abilities of the severely handicapped. They're much more advanced than animals.

I am talking about severely mentally-handicapped people, such as one girl I remember from way back in my elementary school cafeteria who would just rock back and forth, back and forth...Would you say that someone so simple as that, who cannot even form sentences, does not deserve protection? What about babies?
 
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  • #321
energia said:
the natural instinct to be fat?

it seems to be a Natural Instinct for humans to kill each other as well
so why not hunt humans for food?



you mean the death industries?
if people stopped using crack, crack dealers would be out of a job as well



soy meat tastes the same, so what's the difference?



Makani is a location in Hawaii



there is no over population of animals, if anything there is an under population
of most species, however there is a huge over population of humans

there are 6400 Million humans on a planet that can only support 2000 Million



on the contrary, more plant life is consumed by animals which are slaughtered for meat than by any other animals

if these animals were no longer over bred for meat, the amount of plant life consumed would be reduced dramatically



see answer number 3



I assume you mean Corporations (not corperations)
meat industries could easily become soy industries


meat causes critical medical conditions, it's does not prevent them



a huge percentage of the world already does not eat meat



why should anyone bother?



the same thing they do with it now, stuff it and hang it on the wall



..become more healthy



bread, fruit, rice, beans, pasta, vegetables
and soy meat tastes the same as real meat



you have meat, so what's the problem?
keep eating meat if that's what makes you happy


first of all

soy meat does not remotly taste like real meat
makani is a paki dish
and the rest of your stuff was just made up bull****

the whole point people who want to eat meat should and people who don't ... then fine... but don't try to prevent people from eating meat... its just not realistic...
 
  • #322
first of all soy meat does not remotly taste like real meat

have you ever actually tried it?

it's quite nice.. but every brand is different
it takes some experimentation to separate the good from the not so good
but then not all meat is equal quality either

and the rest of your stuff was just made up bull****

uh, no, it's not made up bull****

I only stated facts, if you refuse to accept the facts, then there's nothing more to be said

hey, don't be angry with me, I'm not against you, this topic is just asking a question: should we eat meat, for you the answer is obviously yes
for others it's a definate no

you can deny the evidence that meat is unhealthy for humans, you can deny that killing animals is wrong, the animals being slaughtered have no say in the matter, so their fate is in the hands of profit hungry meat industries (greed has no mercy) who are counting on people like you to keep lusting for meat, not unlike the tabacco industries who are counting on people lusting for cigaretts, do you think they care how many die from lung disease? hundreds of thousands of millions of dollars are all they care about, and all they will ever care about

the whole point people who want to eat meat should and people who don't ... then fine... but don't try to prevent people from eating meat... its just not realistic...

who's trying to prevent anyone from eating meat?
you're free to do as you wish
 
  • #323
Dissident Dan said:
I am talking about severely mentally-handicapped people, such as one girl I remember from way back in my elementary school cafeteria who would just rock back and forth, back and forth...Would you say that someone so simple as that, who cannot even form sentences, does not deserve protection? What about babies?
They do get protection of course. But then answer this: do they get the same protection and rights as fully-functional adults?
 
  • #324
Have you read the article in New Scientist about the man who survived solely on meat. Dont the Inuits survive on mainly meat?? A lot of them manage to stay healthy.
 
  • #325
Inuits become quite fat on their meat diet, which is how they survive the cold

most people do not need to survive in the arctic circle
 
  • #326
As vaxan said.

Quote:
Severely mentally-handicapped people still exhibit a much higher level of intelligence than animals. They learn to communicate with language, learn new things, express themselves, etc. You'd be surprised at the depth and abilities of the severely handicapped. They're much more advanced than animals.

you are quoting the wrong person (this is a quote of a quote)

and the statement is false

also isn't it interesting that there are so many mentally handicapped people
and so few mentally handicapped animals
 
  • #327
energia said:
Inuits become quite fat on their meat diet, which is how they survive the cold

most people do not need to survive in the arctic circle


Well there was a scientist that proved that he could stay healthy on a meat diet and managed quite successfully. He was ill for the first few days but after that he was fine and showed better signs of health than people who aint balanced diets. The doctors didnt think that he would last more than a few days. But then this was the early 1900s or 1930s i think... got to find the copy of the magazine...
 
  • #328
Why don't we eat each other?
 
  • #329
humans are omnivores, we can survive on anything

survival does not equal good health



and there is an ethical question

is it right to kill for cash?

paid assassins kill for cash, is there an ethical problem here?

the meat industries kill for cash, is there a difference?

meat farmers raise whole herds (or flocks) of animals for the purpose of exploiting them and killing them for cash

carnivores do not kill for cash, they kill to survive, and typically only ONE of the weakest individuals they can find, no animal (except humans) hunts to extinction

several species have been hunted (by humans) to extinction, or near extinction (buffalo for example), many fish species face extinction from over fishing, humans kill with impunity, like a virus

animals are not being killed by the hundreds or thousands or even millions

they are being killed EVERY DAY, DAY AFTER DAY by the BILLIONS! (GIGADEATH)

how in the world can human beings do this, without conscience
and still sleep at night?

and yet people have the hypocracy to be outraged when dogs and cats are abused, skinned alive for fur, and eaten (in some asian countries)
as well as horses - because these are "domesticated animals"

people are outraged if 1 single person is murdered!

yet don't give a sh*te if 100's of Billions of Cows, Pigs, Baby Lambs, Chickens, Turkeys, Fish and countless other animals are murdered every day

this is HYPOCRACY!
 
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  • #330
russ_watters said:
They do get protection of course. But then answer this: do they get the same protection and rights as fully-functional adults?

They do not get all the priveleges of more intelligent people, but they still should be afforded basic protection from harm and not be confined (except where it is necessary for their safety), as should be for nonhuman animals.
 
  • #331
Dissident Dan said:
They do not get all the priveleges...
More to the point, they do not get all the rights of other people.
 
  • #332
I think that nonhuman animals have just as much right to noninterference as any human. What this specifically turns out to differes by species, humans have a wider array of possible actions than most species, so we need a larger list of specific rights (free speech, for example).

Regardless of such rights as freedom of speech, freedom to work, etc., mentally-handicapped humans and nonhuman animals still should be afforded basic protection from harm and not be confined (except where it is necessary for their safety), just as should be for human animals.
 
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  • #333
Dissident Dan said:
I think that nonhuman animals have just as much right to noninterference as any human.
Non-interference is a good word for it, and it is the category of rights that an infant (fetus?), elderly, retarded person, or incapacitated person loses. The most extreme of course, is that a person in a coma does not have the right to decide if they live or die.

And of course, criminals, depending on the crime, do not have the right to "not be confined" and in some cases do not even have the right to life.

And:
human animals
Is that a Freudian slip? Wow. I think I said it once tongue-in-cheek (animals are people too...), but...wow.
 
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  • #334
Vegetarianism has its problems

physicskid said:
Should we eat meat?

Nowadays, you can see lots of people trying
to save certain animals from being mistreated, like
protecting the sharks or whales from being
hunted.
But I can't see the diference between
eating a steak and killing a shark.
Anyway, they are all life forms.

In China, people from other countries are
attempting to save bears from being used as
a source of gall bile
by the chinese farmers.
But why not save
the poor chickens in commercial farms
which are kept in very tiny cages which do
not even have enough space for them to turn a
round!

Maybe we should all stop eating meat!
It's not unhealthy or lacking enough essentials
because all the vegetarians around the world
are still perfectly fine and healthy.

Now the main problem is:
- Should we continue eating meat as the world's
population continues to expand rapidly??
- Or should we stop eating meat and everyone changes to
become a vegetarian?
(since it's considered to be
cruel to kill other life forms)

Benefits of becoming a vegetarian:
  • Freedom for all farm animals!
  • Eating less unhealthy food
  • No need to cut any animal bodies or organs=> more convienient & less mess
  • Eating more healthy food!
  • No more interference with the animals' life and death.
  • Increase in animal population!
  • More animals to conduct researches on.
  • No more artificially caused extinction of any animals!
  • and many more!

Pure vegetarianism has its problems. I have known very few of them who can or will strictly live that way. But, one that did, managed to fall down and break her leg and had to use a crutch for five years. After that, she was carefull about calcium supplements.

I think it very unhealthy to get glowing ideas about how healthy such a diet is, especially if forced on kids. For the very young, I have been told it is extremely unhealthy. There is nothing "natural" about such a diet. Don't imagine there is.

Mahatma Gandhi, remarks that when he was very sick they forced cow's milk on him and said it was from a goat, which would have been less objectional. He recovered because of this, and so this very famous saint that went on long fasts and avoided killing any animal was not convinced that vegetarianism was completely life-supporting.
 
  • #335
Växan said:
humans are omnivores, we can survive on anything

No we arent. We don't eat detritus and rotting leaf litter. There are many things humans don't eat.
 
  • #336
i have never broken a bone (at 33 years of age)
after long years of heavy lifting and other physical exertions, hard falls, motorbike accidents, etc...

and all this on a 100% vegan diet

soya milk is as high in calcium as cows milk, and has zero cholesterol
(unlike milk, which is cholesterol death)

and too much calcium is dangerous

the calcium premise is a strawman argument

the only nutrient a vegan diet has less of than a meat diet is Omega 3 (an amino acid) vegan diets contain all amino acids, including Omega 3, but not as much
(fish oil is the most abundant source, and fish oil is quite unhealthy)
 
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  • #337
russ_watters said:
Non-interference is a good word for it, and it is the category of rights that an infant (fetus?), elderly, retarded person, or incapacitated person loses. The most extreme of course, is that a person in a coma does not have the right to decide if they live or die.

And of course, criminals, depending on the crime, do not have the right to "not be confined" and in some cases do not even have the right to life.

The only time that one's right to noninterference should be compromised is when one's actions are detrimental to someone. This is most often not the case. Unethical interference includes most instances of the caging of animals that don't pose threats and beating.

The right to not be beaten is a right of noninterference, and the elderly and the retarded both retain those rights.

There are times when we need to interfere with humans, too, including those with the utmost intelligence. Instances in which nonhuman animals need to be constrained or otherwise interfered with are not arguments against animal rights, for they would apply against human rights, too. I was hoping that I wouldn't have to explicitly say it, but there are cases of necessary interference and cases of unnecessary interference. The food industry unnecessarily interferes with the happiness of animals a staggering amount.

I am against the unneccesary, unpleasant restriction of any creatures and any preventable conditions that make unpleasant restriction necessary.

And: Is that a Freudian slip? Wow. I think I said it once tongue-in-cheek (animals are people too...), but...wow.

It is not. It was completely intentional. Humans are animals. I am an animal. You are an animal.
 
  • #338
robert Ihnot said:
Pure vegetarianism has its problems. I have known very few of them who can or will strictly live that way. But, one that did, managed to fall down and break her leg and had to use a crutch for five years. After that, she was carefull about calcium supplements.

I think it very unhealthy to get glowing ideas about how healthy such a diet is, especially if forced on kids. For the very young, I have been told it is extremely unhealthy. There is nothing "natural" about such a diet. Don't imagine there is.

Mahatma Gandhi...

The idea that the vegan diet results in weak people is falsity of our prejudiced societies. I have been vegan for over two years (and I know many who have been for decades, including bodybuilders), and I still have not broken any bones, and I bench press at least 80 lbs over my bodyweight. I frequently do strenuous exercise that requires strength and agility.

I feel great. I do not feel tired or weak or anything of that sort.
 
  • #339
More delicious vegetarian options at the supermarket, more nutritional education including, e. g., preparation of whole foods, instruction in growing my own food, and changing the ascetic or righteous reputation of vegetarianism would influence me to eat less meat.

Just think if vegetarianism itself got the press that the "low carb" diet has!
 
  • #340
Why are you concerned with the image of vegetarians? Is it because you don't want to be stigmatized, or because you don't like those who currently are stigmatized?

There are more vegetarian specialty items today than any time that I can remember. In all grocery stores, you have veggie burgers of some sort. Many stores carry many types. Pubix and Target carry an excellent line of products called Amy's. The produce, refrigerated, and frozen sections contain a lot of these items.

If you happen to visit a "natural foods" store such as Trader Joe's or Whole Foods, you might be surprised at the options available.

And there are always traditional foods-spaghetti, rice&beans, cereal, fruit, veggies, nuts, etc. Ethnic restaurants often offer more vegetarian options than most restaurants.

There is good list of links for nutritional information available at:
http://www.barcdontbite.org/health/vegnutrition.htm
 
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  • #341
The image of vegetarians bothers me less than lack of access. I work at a Nature Center, where many have followed a non-meat diet, and are educated in working closely with animals. People like Gary Null (on the radio), though, with their whining and righteousness, turn me off.

Arlington actually has more options, such as restaurants, than most localities. We had a natural food co-op here (now out of business) that expected me to travel a ten mile (automobile?) trip for inflated prices. Tonight I have Basmati rice pilaf, from Safeway. I gave up on organic milk because it cost nearly three times the store brand, although it did taste better.

What can one get to eat at Pubix [sic] anyway? :wink:
 
  • #342
I'm still not sure whether you are saying that you dislike some vegetarians, and your dislike for them turns you away from vegetarianism, or it's that you don't want to have the image yourself.

At Publix, you can get:

-Silk (and other brands of) soymilk
-Many types of veggie burgers
-Other veggie meat replacers
-Many of Amy's line of vegetarian products (http://www.amys.com/)
-Different types of tofu (although I rarely eat tofu, myself)
-Veggie cheese (I am not a big fan)
-Smart Balance Light spread (no animal ingredients)
-Normal, non-specialty vegetarian foods

There are many things in the produce section, the frozen section, the refrigerated section, and their "Greenwise" isle.
 
  • #343
I like to cook simple. Like a 6 oz. slice of extra firm tofu sauteed in olive oil, served with soy sauce. Or 2 Morningstar Farms Garden Veggie Patties. 2nd(?) Continent soy milk. At least, almost always, 2 servings of dark green or dark yellow vegetables at dinner. Cutting back a bit on generous servings of 100% fruit juice due to sugar. Cheap protein includes animals.
 
  • #344
Einstein

Einstein was a vegetarian and said that we would halt our progress by not progressing to a vegetarian diet. Smart fellow.
 
  • #345
robert Ihnot said:
Pure vegetarianism has its problems. I have known very few of them who can or will strictly live that way. But, one that did, managed to fall down and break her leg and had to use a crutch for five years. After that, she was carefull about calcium supplements.
...

Mahatma Gandhi, remarks that when he was very sick they forced cow's milk on him and said it was from a goat, which would have been less objectional. He recovered because of this, and so this very famous saint that went on long fasts and avoided killing any animal was not convinced that vegetarianism was completely life-supporting.

There are about as many vegetarians in India as there are people in the United States. Also, I don't see the connection between goat's milk and vegetarianism.
 
  • #346
Yes we should

I believe meat can't be excluded as a food source, simply because there isn't anything that can be a substitution for it for a larger part of the Humanity.

Anyway, even if there wouldn't be global famine, we would probably witness accelerated destruction of forests/ green surfaces in order to turn it into farmland. This would in turn manifest itself negatively on all other life forms.
I really don't understand people who care so much about animals, while neglecting trees, grass, carrots, cabbage, etc. In my opinion we are all equal(meaning that we live). To put it another way: if you feel sorry for the meet you're eating, then what about salad?
 
  • #347
Being kind

With 6 billion people on this planet, vegetable protein is far more environmentally friendly. It takes several acres to raise one cow. That land could grow soy beans and yield much more protein.

I have decided to cause as little pain and suffering as is reasonable possible while I am on this most imperfect planet and therefore eschew meat. Humans have to little respect for their fellow earthlings. We are they and they are us.

It is not unreasonable to assume that a much more advanced race could come to Earth and use our justifications of animal abuse to abuse us.
 
  • #348
Bogus Argument

"I really don't understand people who care so much about animals, while neglecting trees, grass, carrots, cabbage, etc. In my opinion we are all equal(meaning that we live). To put it another way: if you feel sorry for the meet you're eating, then what about salad?"

Vacuum: Your argument is bogus. Science nerds use it to justify animal abuse and mistreatment. Tell me this and please be honest; Could you hold a tourch to a living dogs eye as easily as you could to the eye of a potatoe?
 
  • #349
Bogus Argument

Darn I pulled a Dan Quale: Make that "potato"
 
  • #350
Like I say, better to eschew meat than chew meat!

Why do you think aliens don't show up on our planet? Maybe they're bovine.
 

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