TS: eating meat vs. not eating meat

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Has this been done before?

A couple friends of mine just read Peter Singer's book about animals. I haven't read it, but the genreal idea of it is that it is immoral to eat meat that comes from an animal that was raised in bad conditions because it means you are supporting the bad treatment of those animals. It gives plenty of example of the horrible conditions that animals are raised in, and how much they suffer. Almost all meat that is in store or restaurants comes from places that mass market meat and have these horrible conditions. So what is it beef or leaf?

A Nairn (moretap), Friday, 20 December 2002 21:56 (twenty-three years ago)

My argument to my friends was that I totally agree that the animals suffer, but convenience of availabilty, nutriton, and taste make me not stop eating meat.

A Nairn (moretap), Friday, 20 December 2002 21:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Of course there are religious reasons, or trendy reasons for not eating meat, but I'm talking about the non-religious moral reason of not wanting sentient animals to suffer.

A Nairn (moretap), Friday, 20 December 2002 22:03 (twenty-three years ago)

That word "sentient" has crept in without explanation, and is a key point in the argument.

I see no reason why chickens have to be kept in six inch cages or whatever it is, but I'm not stopping eating meat. I couldn't survive on chocolate only, after all.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Friday, 20 December 2002 22:13 (twenty-three years ago)

Yeah, that is a main argument about this topic. Are animals sentient and do they suffer? and If so Is it morally wrong for you to allow them to suffer?

A Nairn (moretap), Friday, 20 December 2002 22:47 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think it's a yes/no question. Oysters < sheep < chimps < humans, in these terms. Where you draw your line is an impossible question to answer happily, given that most are not comfy with the idea of eating chimps. For me, the more we believe they feel pain and suffer, the more we should avoid increasing that suffering unnecessarily, but that opens about fifty cans of worms.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Friday, 20 December 2002 22:58 (twenty-three years ago)

eating not-meat

geeta (geeta), Friday, 20 December 2002 23:14 (twenty-three years ago)

Why has no derivatively titled thread been started yet?

Graham (graham), Saturday, 21 December 2002 00:55 (twenty-three years ago)

Here's how it works...

I totally agree that the animals suffer, but convenience of availabilty, nutriton, and taste make me not stop eating meat.

This is the whole debate made simple and good. To eat meat is to put human convenience and taste (nutrition doesn't make sense here, I admit) above the potential suffering of lesser creatures.

People don't need meat. But many of them want it. That's enough.

Yeah, that is a main argument about this topic. Are animals sentient and do they suffer?

Oh yeah, that's the question. Are animals sentient? What does it mean to be sentient? These are questions.

Are A Nairn and Martin Skidmore sentient? No doubt about it, surely?

But what if there were doubt? Is it really possible for us to prove or disprove that Martin Skidmore or cows are sentient/non sentient?

Should the attitude be, 'prove cows can suffer and then we'll stop killing them for convenience and taste, and feel slightly sad for all the years when we didn't need to eat cows but just fancied a burger'?

Or should the attitude be, 'until it can be proven that cows don't suffer (this can't be proven, I admit), we won't kill them and eat them just because we fancy it'?


Oh yeah, I forgot. There's good evidence that A Nairn and Martin Skidmore are more sentient than cows. The evidence is that they post cleverer messages on ILX than any cow in history.

They also post cleverer messages than my retard little brother. He was born a dummy. He hardly thinks and should be eaten.

My sister's son, mind you, officially isn't a retard, but I swear to God he isn't sentient. Mark. He's four months old, but if I butcher the fucker soon, that'll be cool. To fit him into Martin Skidmore's scale, I'd say: Oysters < Mark < sheep < chimps < humans.

Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Saturday, 21 December 2002 01:18 (twenty-three years ago)

The taste/nutrition argument is specious: it's not only possible to eat a wide variety of delicious foods without including meat, it's commonly done. So then the question becomes "do I, by eating meat, contribute to some industry or process which I as a human being do not support?"

J0hn Darn13ll3 (J0hn Darn13ll3), Saturday, 21 December 2002 01:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Can animals suffer? Obviously. Even earthworms recoil from painful stimulus.

Is this fact relevant? Up to a point, sure. But no further.
Widely accepted canons of morality require that we do not inflict pointless suffering. However, if you stretch morality to require that we do not inflict any suffering, then you very rapidly find that morality is strictly and comprehensively impossible. That is not a good thing. If you put morality forever out of human reach, there is no incentive to pursue it.

But killing to eat is not pointless. Anything but. And we humans, I would like to point out, dispatch our victims at least as rapidly and painlessly as most predators do. One has only to watch a lion calmly rip out the entrails of a dying gemsbuck to know that.

Moreover, every animal dies and is eaten. You will die and be eaten. This is not only unavoidable, it is necessary. It is God's way, Nature's way and the way of the world. It requires willful blindness to miss this fact. Without this delightful fact the world would be knee deep in uneaten corpses of every description. Luckily, bacteria are not finicky eaters. In fact, when meat 'spoils' it is just bacteria's selfish way of keeping it all for itself and not sharing.

In my estimation, the only ironclad motives for not eating meat are religious or emotional ones. I have no bone to pick with anyone who honestly believes God wants them not to eat meat. The same applies to anyone for whom the very act of putting morsels of dead animals in their mouth is viscerally disgusting. You can't argue with that and shouldn't try.

If you remove these extra-rational motives, I just can't see how you can get there on purely rational grounds.

Aimless, Saturday, 21 December 2002 02:39 (twenty-three years ago)

But killing to eat is not pointless. Anything but.

Humans killing to eat has a point in that many people find the taste of animal corpses pleasurable. That's the point. I'm comfortable with the fact that humans consider their own pleasure to be of greater importance than the potential (but unproveable) suffering of ugly creatures.

It is God's way, Nature's way and the way of the world.

Fine, but you sound crazy, and your logic would excuse anything.

If you remove these extra-rational motives, I just can't see how you can get there on purely rational grounds.

Here's how: it doesn't take much effort not to eat meat. Your body does not need meat. By eating meat you finance cruelty. If you wish to defend your own actions by transposing the behaviour of other species onto humans you will encounter trouble as ideas abhorrent to you are also shown to be "nature's way and the way of the world".

Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Saturday, 21 December 2002 03:26 (twenty-three years ago)

That fourth one didn't work out too well
ah well.

Curtis Stephens, Saturday, 21 December 2002 04:37 (twenty-three years ago)

Query: Do Peter Singer and his followers concern themselves very much with people who are living in bad conditions (however they define these)? I agree that the circumstances aren't perfectly identical, I'm just curious.

j.lu (j.lu), Saturday, 21 December 2002 04:39 (twenty-three years ago)

I really should stop. Again (last time lasted five years). I'm iron deficient now tho - so I'll have to pay careful attention to my diet if I do.

Kim (Kim), Saturday, 21 December 2002 04:50 (twenty-three years ago)

"pay careful attention to my diet if I do"

That's what I was talking about above with nutritional convenience. As for Peter Singer the book is called "Animal Liberation", I intend to read it soon. He covers lots of areas of Philosophy in his articles and books, but his main focus is animal rights.

http://www.animalsvoice.com/PAGES/rights/anilib.html

A Nairn (moretap), Saturday, 21 December 2002 06:38 (twenty-three years ago)

It's really hard to eat a diet that's not high in carbohydrates if you're a vegetarian. I'm not sure that it's *impossible*, but it's certainly *incredibly* difficult, and as a person with PCOS/insulin resistance, it just isn't a very good idea to go vegetarian.

Melissa W (Melissa W), Saturday, 21 December 2002 06:49 (twenty-three years ago)

like any other thing in life, there are pros and cons. for many people in the world, eating meat IS WORTH IT i.e. the advantages outweigh the disadvantages.

i acknowledge the cruelty issues. from what i understand, meat is a fairly inefficient food source (how much land it takes to support a cow, and all that) A LOT of people want meat. this leads to a situation where the well being of the animals is sacrificed for the (supposed) benefit of the human consumers. and as typical of capitalism, the net result is less than ideal: a bunch of low quality, (relatively) cheap product for the masses to consume. that's just how it's going to be, most of the time. there are the exceptions, like the smaller free-range livestock companies, but you are going to PAY for that moral/taste consideration - the majority of meat cannot be raised that way.

it's kind of a dumb thing to take sides on, really. i don't much care if another person eats meat or not. and up to this point, what other people think doesn't really have much to do with whether i will continue or not. i'm not a big fan of evangelism, religious, dietary or otherwise

ron (ron), Saturday, 21 December 2002 07:35 (twenty-three years ago)

I had the best steak tonight! Medium rare - yum yum!

James Blount (James Blount), Saturday, 21 December 2002 09:56 (twenty-three years ago)

Hi. My name is Joe, and I'm a carnivore.

Joe (Joe), Saturday, 21 December 2002 13:56 (twenty-three years ago)

Avoiding meat would be easier if vegetables weren't almost all rubbish. The only good ones are chips and crisps (that's fries and chips, Americans), as I've said before.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Saturday, 21 December 2002 14:35 (twenty-three years ago)

there are the exceptions, like the smaller free-range livestock companies, but you are going to PAY for that moral/taste consideration - the majority of meat cannot be raised that way.

Chipotle (a subsidiary of McDonald's) claims that none of its pork is factory farmed. Do you think that this could literally be the case?

j.lu (j.lu), Saturday, 21 December 2002 14:40 (twenty-three years ago)

Query: Do Peter Singer and his followers concern themselves very much with people who are living in bad conditions (however they define these)? I agree that the circumstances aren't perfectly identical, I'm just curious.

Naturally I can't speak for all vegetarians but my experience has been, yes, most vegetarians are trad. lefties: concerned about the poor, ant-war, etc. The use of land for grazing livestock instead of growing vegetables results directly in more starving people, according to a number of admittedly biased vegetarians, though their logic seems sound to me: I can feed more people with the beans and corn grown on an acre of land than I can with the cows I can graze on that land over the same amount of time. But as James notes above in his "yum-yum" comment, most people couldn't give two shits if the eating of meat and its surrounding bad agricultural practices results in more starving people. It is much more important to feed our faces, get off a flip comment or two, and, most importantly, acknowledge that the situtation is "complex" and therefore we should just do whatever we like.

J0hn Darni3ll3 (J0hn Darni3ll3), Saturday, 21 December 2002 14:46 (twenty-three years ago)

"ant-war": yes we are v. concerned about Ant Wars. Umm, meant to write "anti-war" :)

j. lu - I'd guess that Chipotle have found someplace where it says "factory farm" means a very specific sort of hog confinement, and Chipotle's confinements don't meet all the specific criteria, and therefore we don't need to worry about the pigs in question. If this is the case, I don't imagine one of these non-factory "farms" would be a place you'd like to spend an afternoon.

J0hn Darni3ll3 (J0hn Darni3ll3), Saturday, 21 December 2002 14:53 (twenty-three years ago)

There is enough food produced in the world with current practices to feed everyone adequately, so I don't think the argument for vegetarianism can be usefully made this way.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Saturday, 21 December 2002 15:22 (twenty-three years ago)

haha maybe they are laboratory-farmed!

ron (ron), Saturday, 21 December 2002 16:26 (twenty-three years ago)

"The evidence is that they post cleverer messages on ILX than any cow in history."

i wasn't aware that cows were posting on ilx...

an interesting article on this very subject:

(was thinking of starting a thread on it, but i'm not much of a thread-starter)

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/10/magazine/10ANIMAL.html?pagewanted=1

you have to register for nyt, but it's worth it.

oh, here's excerpts (not necessarily cut and pasted in an order that would make sense, per se), from the article by micheal pollan:

This should come as no surprise: morality is an artifact of human culture, devised to help us negotiate social relations. It's very good for that. But just as we recognize that nature doesn't provide an adequate guide for human social conduct, isn't it anthropocentric to assume that our moral system offers an adequate guide for nature? We may require a different set of ethics to guide our dealings with the natural world, one as well suited to the particular needs of plants and animals and habitats (where sentience counts for little) as rights suit us humans today.

(and on vegetarianism)--

The farmer would point out that even vegans have a ''serious clash of interests'' with other animals. The grain that the vegan eats is harvested with a combine that shreds field mice, while the farmer's tractor crushes woodchucks in their burrows, and his pesticides drop songbirds from the sky. Steve Davis, an animal scientist at Oregon State University, has estimated that if America were to adopt a strictly vegetarian diet, the total number of animals killed every year would actually increase, as animal pasture gave way to row crops. Davis contends that if our goal is to kill as few animals as possible, then people should eat the largest possible animal that can live on the least intensively cultivated land: grass-fed beef for everybody. It would appear that killing animals is unavoidable no matter what we choose to eat.

The world is full of places where the best, if not the only, way to obtain food from the land is by grazing animals on it -- especially ruminants, which alone can transform grass into protein and whose presence can actually improve the health of the land.

The vegetarian utopia would make us even more dependent than we already are on an industrialized national food chain. That food chain would in turn be even more dependent than it already is on fossil fuels and chemical fertilizer, since food would need to travel farther and manure would be in short supply. Indeed, it is doubtful that you can build a more sustainable agriculture without animals to cycle nutrients and support local food production. If our concern is for the health of nature -- rather than, say, the internal consistency of our moral code or the condition of our souls -- then eating animals may sometimes be the most ethical thing to do.

Granting rights to animals may lift us up from the brutal world of predation, but it will entail the sacrifice of part of our identity -- our own animality.

Surely this is one of the odder paradoxes of animal rights doctrine. It asks us to recognize all that we share with animals and then demands that we act toward them in a most unanimalistic way.

JuliaA (j_bdules), Saturday, 21 December 2002 17:02 (twenty-three years ago)

"The grain that the vegan eats is harvested with a combine that shreds field mice, while the farmer's tractor crushes woodchucks in their burrows, and his pesticides drop songbirds from the sky."
"animal pasture gave way to row crops"

When a similar argument to this was mentioned to my friends they said that they are not against the killing of animals, but they are against the conditions the animals are raised in. They are vegitarians because they don't want to eat meat that was raised in bad conditions, not because they don't want to kill animals. They acknowledge that man is higher on the food chain. They said if an animal could live naturally in the wild and then was killed to be eaten they wouldn't think that morally wrong.

A Nairn (moretap), Saturday, 21 December 2002 18:21 (twenty-three years ago)

and then demands that we act toward them in a most unanimalistic way

Except that our gastrointestinal tract doesn't even remotely resemble that of the average carnivorous GI tract. Most creatures with long GI tracts like ours are herbivores, or at most occasional eaters of meat (as some monkeys, like baboons).

J0hn Darn13lle, Saturday, 21 December 2002 19:40 (twenty-three years ago)

when it comes to most store bought meat, animals raised in bad conditions seems to be the norm. it's appalling, actually...

but there are farms, such as one described at the end of that article, where the animals are treated humanely. unfortunately, the meat coming from such farms is considerably more expensive. many who feel strongly about reasonable treatment of animals can't afford that.

vegetarianism is an easy and economical way to make such a statement. but some of us like burgers. a dilemma...

physiologically, we aren't designed to be carnivores or herbivores per se so much as omnivores.

i seem to be putting myself to sleep.

JuliaA (j_bdules), Saturday, 21 December 2002 20:18 (twenty-three years ago)

I've discovered that since I went vegetarian I get sick _much much_ less often, and less seriously when I do. Seems like a pretty convincing argument for the eating-only-the-millions-of-things-that- aren't-meat side of things.

Douglas, Saturday, 21 December 2002 20:38 (twenty-three years ago)

i don't think that one person's recollections about their health history makes a very convincing argument, no offense.

ron (ron), Saturday, 21 December 2002 21:21 (twenty-three years ago)

s

of course, i'm glad that your diet makes you feel healthier. :-)

ron (ron), Saturday, 21 December 2002 21:29 (twenty-three years ago)

i don't think that one person's recollections about their health history makes a very convincing argument, no offense.

Millions of vegetarians who don't read ilX0r have had similar experiences to the one Douglas reports, but that wouldn't convince you either, I don't suspect! People who are determined to eat meat will ignore mountains of evidence, anecdotal or otherwise, to justify their behavior.

J0hn Darni3ll3 (J0hn Darni3ll3), Saturday, 21 December 2002 21:39 (twenty-three years ago)

But... but... when I was a vegetarian I rarely got sick and when I resumed eating meat I rarely got sick, either. What the heck does that mean?

It seems to me that one's state of health depends on factors other than whether one excludes all meat from their diet. For example, if I ate meat once a week, I would not be a vegetarian, but I would probably derive every health benefit claimed by vegetarians. It is the emphasis on total prohibition of meat that makes a vegetarian a vegetarian. What isn't clear to me is why total prohibition is superior to moderation.

As for the problem of cruelty to animals that are bred and raised in factory farms, it would seem to me that this is a great argument against cruel practises, but a negligble argument against eating meat, since, presumably, being raised on a factory farm is not a necessary condition, but only a contingent or incidental factor. To make this clearer, suppose you bought factory-farmed meat and didn't eat it, you'd 1) still be a vegetarian 2) still be subsidizing cruelty. So, obviously, the eating isn't the critical factor here.

Aimless, Saturday, 21 December 2002 22:01 (twenty-three years ago)

I also had a sweet potato - Yum Yum!

James Blount (James Blount), Saturday, 21 December 2002 22:56 (twenty-three years ago)

It is pretty well established that a vegetarian diet is much healthier for you though, so Douglas experiences can be seen as the norm.

James Blount (James Blount), Saturday, 21 December 2002 23:03 (twenty-three years ago)

john, yr probably right that it wouldn't change my mind, but i'd probably concede it to be a convincing argument, if that was what he had said. the 'argument' as presented was closer to "i seem to remember being sick less these days, therefore everyone should be vegetarian"

back to what i said before - for me, meat is "worth it". going veggie might take me down from two sick days per year to one, but i would be less happy because of all the tasty foods i'd be missing. maybe someday i'll change my mind. who cares

NB i'm not really taking this as seriously or literally as it seems ;-) and again, i'm all in favor of people eating whatever they want to, and i'm glad that so many people enjoy the health benefits of veggie lifestyles, that's wonderful.

ron (ron), Saturday, 21 December 2002 23:11 (twenty-three years ago)

healthier than what? the typical american diet? hell, yeah. but a more health-oriented diet, including reasonable portions of meat? possibly, but not necessarily. (what aimless said--moderation).

it all depends on individual metabolism and such. i have a friend with extreme food sensitivities, who would be a vegetarian for her beliefs. but she has to eat meat because she's so allergic to most plant sources of protein, and she feels awful when she doesn't eat meat.

i'm all for vegetarianism--i don't eat much meat myself, and have gone through periods of foregoing meat altogether. but it's not the only way to go, idealistically or health-wise.

mmmmmm, sweeet potato...

JuliaA (j_bdules), Saturday, 21 December 2002 23:21 (twenty-three years ago)

The sweet potato was almost as good as the steak!

James Blount (James Blount), Saturday, 21 December 2002 23:34 (twenty-three years ago)

I see no reason why chickens have to be kept in six inch cages or whatever it is, but I'm not stopping eating meat. I couldn't survive on chocolate only, after all.

Actually, this pretty much covers it for me.

Curtis Stephens, Sunday, 22 December 2002 04:19 (twenty-three years ago)

After reading both "Fast Food Nation" and Pollan's article from the NYT quoted above, I still eat meat, but in moderation. I have stopped going to fast-food restaurants alltogether.

It is the high demand for CHEAP meat that drives the deplorable conditions in most industrialized farms and meat-packing plants. If the demand for meat was reduced, then conditions would improve. It is very expenisive to keep a cow stuffed with all of the various drugs that allow it to live in the horrible conditions that it is presented with.

In America, meat is a lot like oil. We pay way too little for it (the real costs to the environment are obscured), and we believe the low prices we pay are a (god-given) Right.

Aaron Grossman (aajjgg), Sunday, 22 December 2002 05:16 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't eat at fast food restaurants nearly as much as I used to (maybe once every three months), and it's largely due to Fast Food Nation, although more the anti-labor issues than the anti-enviroment stuff. Of course part of it I'm trying to eat healthier (hence, er, steak and sweet potatoes) and I can afford to eat better.

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 22 December 2002 06:08 (twenty-three years ago)

the labor issues pissed me off the most, too. if i am ever forced against my will to go into mcdonalds again, i will ask for a burger with no lettuce, pickle or chunks of the hands of migrant workers. i will also hand the server a pamphlet on unions.

also, i am not in favor of advertising to kids.

Aaron Grossman (aajjgg), Sunday, 22 December 2002 06:19 (twenty-three years ago)

"So, obviously, the eating isn't the critical factor here."

Yeah, It's the supporting of the factory farming businesses by buying the meat that is the critical factor.


A Nairn (moretap), Sunday, 22 December 2002 07:44 (twenty-three years ago)

quite often i am not in favor of advertising to humans

ron (ron), Sunday, 22 December 2002 10:44 (twenty-three years ago)

The thing is, ron (all this meant in only a friendly way, so if I sound strident, it's only that I haven't had any coffee yet), that the "one or two less sick days" is not only an understatement, but a gross understatement. Vegetarians live longer: Recent analysis of data from the Adventist Health Study which predicted life expectancy in Seventh-day Adventists following different behaviour patterns. The researchers found that a combination of different lifestyle choices could influence life expectancy by as much as 10 years. Among the lifestyle choices investigated, a vegetarian diet was estimated to confer an extra 1 ½ to 2 years of life. (Paul Appleby, admittedly partisan talk at the Oxford Society for Vegetarians)

Now, the usual answer to this from people who are very gung-ho about eating meat is: "Ha! So I die at 79 instead of 80? It's worth it if I get to enjoy all this delicious meat!" Ask some 79-year-olds, though, whether it's all the same to them if they die next week or a year from then, and you'll find that the extra year gets more meaningful as you get closer to it.

There are plenty of other studies in this regard; I've picked one of the most conservative. Human metabolisms weren't designed for eating meat, and when they're forced to do so they break down earlier.

J0hn Darni3ll3 (J0hn Darni3ll3), Sunday, 22 December 2002 14:09 (twenty-three years ago)

well, i'm not sure that i believe that last statement, but you very well may be right.

re: sick days. again, i can totally see where you guys are coming from. i don't doubt that a veg. diet can be much healthier. but what i'm saying is that this year i took one day off work because i was sick. so in terms of being sick (which was what douglas was originally talking about, NOT general long-term health) there's really not that big of a problem for me.

so, long-term then. i am sure that i will be less healthy at 79 than if i had been a vegetarian. i may, at that time, regret the decisions that i'm making now. i feel that is better to base my decisions on what does bring me pleasure, rather than on what might - in 50 years time.

right now, i really hope i don't live to be 80, actually. that's a whole different set of issues that maybe it's best not to get into

ron (ron), Sunday, 22 December 2002 18:09 (twenty-three years ago)

butter your bacon!
now bacon your sausage!


I love meat, without it there would be now C'est What beer pie. I even forgive it when it tried to kill me.

Mr Noodles (Mr Noodles), Monday, 23 December 2002 02:00 (twenty-three years ago)

This is obvious but...

"And we humans, I would like to point out, dispatch our victims at least as rapidly and painlessly as most predators do."

Wait, so now wolves and cougars are storing their prey in boxes barely big enough to hold their carcasses, leaving them to rot in their own excrement and filth?

Nick A. (Nick A.), Monday, 23 December 2002 17:04 (twenty-three years ago)

It would appear that some of the contributors to this thread are not aware that not all meat is 'tainted' by cruel factory farming practises.

Although I live in a city, the city has limits. It is entirely possible to buy meat direct from an individual farmer who raised it, pastured it and slaughtered it - often within 25 miles of my house. I have even known some people to move to a rural area, raise goats or chickens, kill them, dress them and eat them with no third party involved.

It is also quite simple to obtain a hunting license and to hunt for animals such as deer, elk, and a wide variety of game birds (although it is not always simple to hunt them successfully; game is wily and wary and hard to fool).

This is meat I can eat and none of it has anything to do with factory farms.

I would be the first to agree that our basic farming and food distribution system is broken in many ways and needs fixing. Western industrial nations are creating a system that looks more and more like modern versions of the Roman latifundia. But vegetarianism is the answer to a different question altogether.

As for the repeated contention that human digestive tracts are not 'designed' for digesting meat, I find that rather hard to understand. As far as I can see, humans are neither carniverous nor herbiverous, but rather clearly omniverous. Herbivores are specialists. We are generalists. One trait of generalists is that they can't compete with a specialist in the specialist's area. We may not digest meat as thoroughly as a lion does, but neither can we compete with a ruminant when it comes to eating grass. If it came to that, you'd live a lot longer on an all-meat diet than you would on a diet of hay.

As I have already said, I am not in the business of telling a vegetarian they "ought" to eat meat. I ate no meat for about a year and a half and suffered no noticeable ill effects. It is a personal choice. But I have little patience for vegetarians who claim it is a superior choice on scientific grounds. The arguments used to back up this claim appear highly specious to me. They only have force if you carefully restrict the facts. That is not how science works.

Nor do I have any more patience for vegetarians who claim I am not a moral person if I eat meat. The less said on that, the better.

Aimless, Monday, 23 December 2002 19:30 (twenty-three years ago)

Maybe one of the reasons vegetarians live better is that they're actually watching what they eat more carefully.

Maria (Maria), Monday, 23 December 2002 20:44 (twenty-three years ago)

some of them do. i knew someone who called themself a vegetarian because all he would eat was rice sandwiches. i am surprised not to see miss katie g on this thread. to the people who have said that meat is more tasty, i would ask if they've actually ever eaten the following things: hummus, falafel, refried beans, vegetarian lasagne, palak paneer, chana masala, dahl oh geez i could go on for ever.

i think the health benefits of vegetarianism would be much more pronounced if one ate organic food. sadly, organic food is expensive.

i have been tempted to get on my high horse about people who would choose convenience over not imposing suffering on other beings, but as someone who finds it hard to give up cheese, i feel i have no right to do this.

di smith (lucylurex), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 01:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Why has no derivatively titled thread been started yet?

Dan Perry to thread! Or board, whatever.

I haven't thoroughly read this thread, but I will - I wanted to just put forth something though. There are some of us who don't eat (much) meat because we don't like the way it tastes. In general, eating too much meat makes me nauseous, and many types of meat taste horrible to me. A doctor once told me it was a problem with the way I am made, I am almost allergic to a protein in meat and that is why it makes me feel sick. So I can only eat it in bits, and I only eat it occasionally, when I am feeling a bit "run down" and think that having some extra iron might help. Or if I'm totally hammered out of my mind, cos some reason that's the only way that a hamburger doesn't make me puke. Anyway.

I don't like to see things suffer, but on the other hand I am terrified of most farm animals, so I have no sympathy for them, much as one with arachnaphobia would have no sympathy for a squished spider. I try but I cannot care. I would like to care because I do feel very heartless saying otherwise - I mean right this second I feel like a massive bitch - but even BABY farm animals scare the shit out of me.

I guess I just wanted to make this point because not all vegetarians or psuedo-vegetarians are in it for the sake of the animals. Some of us take the "not eating meat" side for many other reasons, from health to just plain taste to a genuine problem digesting other fleshy beings.

The only time I have issue with anyone's choice is when it's either meat eaters who rail on vegetarians as tree hugger hippies, or animal-lover "vegetarians" who go on and on all PETA-stylee - then put on a pair of Doc Martins, which are made out of cows.

And I hate that organic food is so expensive, looking at di's post, because I prefer to eat that too.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 06:13 (twenty-three years ago)

i just realized the critical point:

you can't have any pudding if you don't eat your meat!

ron (ron), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 06:28 (twenty-three years ago)

Pink Floyd. This thread is over!

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 06:42 (twenty-three years ago)

whoot

ron (ron), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 06:46 (twenty-three years ago)

Quick, ron, name another song about meat and revive.

Ally (mlescaut), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 07:14 (twenty-three years ago)

a big fresh meat slice, streamlined solid steel knife in it

i must energize

ron (ron), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 07:40 (twenty-three years ago)

i am surprised not to see miss katie g on this thread

di, i was going to post but bah i've done so so many times that if there's anyone in the whole entire world who doesn't know i'm a BIG TREE HUGGIN PLASTIC SHOE WEARING LEAF MUNCHING VEGAN MENTALIST then i wd be v surprised ;) i'm a bit too tired to get into the whole "do animals have souls" debate - it's enough for me that i believe cruelty is wrong (Nick A's point above about wolves etc not being into BATTERY FARMING is a good one) and so i try not to perpetrate it.

katie (katie), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 11:31 (twenty-three years ago)

it worked!

ron (ron), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 15:47 (twenty-three years ago)

We had this thread before and I said something to the effect of:
Its like argueing the vegans I used to work with at the campus paper all over again.

Mr Noodles (Mr Noodles), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 21:13 (twenty-three years ago)

Aimless is of course right that it's possible to eat cruelty-free meat, but the effort is too great for me. I can't imagine every time I go out to eat having to inquire into where the restaurant gets its meat, how it was killed, checking all the tags at grocery stores, etc. I think, for me, it would lapse into, well, just this once I won't worry about it and then eventually to eh, who cares, I'll just eat whatever. So for me, it's easier just to not any meat at all. Maybe that means I don't really care enough, but it almost completely assures that I'm not eating any "cruel meat."

For me, peoples' eating habits are like their religion. I believe in personal choice, and if someone wants to eat meat (or go to church), I'm not going to hassle them about it or make cutting comments or look down my nose. I don't think you can be forced into a choice like this. But if someone pushes my nose in their choice ("Yum, yum, meat sure tastes good!"), obviously mocking what I believe in (or don't believe in), or makes some idiotic bullshit comment (see my post upthread), then I'll get nasty about it.

Some of the carnivorous comments above smack of justification, like people know that not caring and eating meat because it's "convenient" is somehow contrary to their beliefs about killing living creatures, but they have to assuage their guilt somehow. Why else would some flaunt their dietary habits by talking about how delicious meat is? Why the fuck do you care what I eat?

Nick A. (Nick A.), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 23:28 (twenty-three years ago)

animal-lover "vegetarians" who go on and on all PETA-stylee - then put on a pair of Doc Martins, which are made out of cows.

No joke, I can go on and on about this stuff. When I'm done, I often do put on my Doc Marten's - which are NON LEATHER. You can't get me on my shoes (unless you really hate DMs).

Eyeball Kicks (Eyeball Kicks), Tuesday, 24 December 2002 23:50 (twenty-three years ago)

For me, peoples' eating habits are like their religion.

I more or less agree with this. I mean, I have read up on vegetarianism and read the Singer book and generally agree with John's points -- but I'm also not entirely convinced that (much of?) that research wasn't done with an agenda. Although it does make more sense than most of the anti-vegerarian reasoning I've seen. I am equivocating.

But really: I went vegetarian when I was 12. Clearly, clearly even if I might have been an allegedly "gifted" 12-year-old, I wasn't thumbing through Singer and coming up with a fully articulated and researched world-view when I decided to stop eating meat. I stopped because it seemed, well, wrong. Not so much morally wrong, but I guess you could say physically wrong? It just wasn't the sort of thing I thought I really wanted to do.

And since then I have done lots of reading and decided that there are good health and ethical reasons for not eating meat, but at the same time it almost feels like researching health and ethical reasons for being gay: I don't eat meat because it seems like a creepy and unfathomable thing to do, and I don't sleep with women because, well, I'm not going to say it's creepy, but it's something that I have no interest in doing and which feels alien. It "wouldn't be me" to eat a hamburger.

And yet of course I realize that we are all individuals and just as we don't all agree on the merits of any particular song and just as we all have our own kinks and fetishes, similarly some of us feel averse to eating meat and some of us don't. And even though I generally have sympathy towards and agreement with the reasoning why everyone should be vegetarian that John argues, I'm just not convinced that vegetarianism is possible for everyone. Or, at least, as possible as it is for me.

So. Strident vegetarian ranting and strident anti-vegetarian ranting are both kinda pointless and annoying in my book.

On the other hand, I feel like an equivocating cog in the industrial capitalist thresher when I say that. Bleh. Christmas is carnage.

Chris P (Chris P), Wednesday, 25 December 2002 08:56 (twenty-three years ago)

mmmmmmmmmmmmm, meat.

RJG (RJG), Wednesday, 25 December 2002 09:14 (twenty-three years ago)

three years pass...
http://www.freehomepages.com/wiked/ryu-ken-training.jpg

RANDOM THREAD REVIVE!

A-ron Hubbard (Hurting), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 06:15 (nineteen years ago)

maybe not that random - peta just started a campaign last week about "it's ok to eat fish cos they don't have any feelings" being bullshit, there's been some new study into pain in fish and they apparently feel it as much as any other animal. here: http://www.fishinghurts.com/FishFeelPain.asp

i haven't paid that much attention to it cos it's obv wrong to kill anything to eat for any other reason than you need to do it to survive, but maybe it's interesting. ok, i am never coming back to this thread.

emsk ( emsk), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 08:51 (nineteen years ago)

I'm sure animals would stop eating other animals if they discovered that those animals feel pain. NOT. What if we discovered plants feel pain too?

Nathalie (stevie nixed), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 09:08 (nineteen years ago)

heinz have just started putting fish-based omega 3 oil in their spaghetti. bastards.

Koogy Yonderboy (koogs), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 09:39 (nineteen years ago)

xpost there's always salt

ken c (ken c), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 09:41 (nineteen years ago)

THE BUSHES SCREAM WHILE MY DADDY PRUNES.

aldo_cowpat (aldo_cowpat), Wednesday, 1 November 2006 22:36 (nineteen years ago)

it's obv wrong to kill anything to eat for any other reason than you need to do it to survive

Uh no.

=== temporary username === (Mark C), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:05 (nineteen years ago)

I'm sure animals would stop eating other animals if they discovered that those animals feel pain. NOT. What if we discovered plants feel pain too?

I guess I can understand where this is coming from, but it still makes me pretty mad. Why would I judge people by the same standards that I judge animals?

31g (31g), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:40 (nineteen years ago)

And if plants felt pain veganism would be kind of untenable, but I don't really see what that's supposed to prove.

31g (31g), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:43 (nineteen years ago)

Well, if veganism and meat eating were both morally untenable, we'd be fairly well fucked, no?

John Justen will insert a ship in your cat for no additional fee (johnjusten), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:45 (nineteen years ago)

Breatharian by the brace of Bod.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:46 (nineteen years ago)

Well, I guess vegans would have to choose whether to starve to death or eat "unethical" food, and all of them would choose the latter. I think most vegans would agree with emsk that eating meat is ok if you need it to survive; it wouldn't be any different than that situation. Since I live in a world where plants don't feel pain, I can try to eat more ethically by avoiding meat. What am I missing here?

31g (31g), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:53 (nineteen years ago)

humour

estela (estela), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:56 (nineteen years ago)

We should just eat our dead instead of ruining perfectly good farm land on cemetery plots.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:56 (nineteen years ago)

J0hn D's assertion further up about how our colons arent made for the digestion of meat is one the krishnas like to espouse as well, and when I first read the theory it made sense to me. I'm not so sure though. I can't buy people saying "its much healthier being vegetarian" when every vege I know eats mcdonalds fries, lollies, veg friendly junk, white bread, etc... I'm a meat eater but I eat quality organic/grassfed beef and chicken when I can, only good fresh local cuts (when I can), and lots of fresh veg and grains. I dont eat any junk food at all. I dont see how having a quality bit of chickenbreast, salmon or steak a few dinners a week is going to do me in. When I read/hear someone say they cant stand any vegetables I am horrified. How can you live without tomatoes, sweet potato, beans, peas, brocoli, cabbage, spinach, asian greens.. argh I'd die.

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:56 (nineteen years ago)

I just looked at who started this thread. God Bless Nairn, his trolling shall surely outlive us all.

John Justen will insert a ship in your cat for no additional fee (johnjusten), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:58 (nineteen years ago)

humour

Yeah, BURN I guess.

31g (31g), Thursday, 2 November 2006 00:59 (nineteen years ago)

Trayce, it's true: carnivores have tiny tubes for intestines for quick digestion. They eat, sleep, shit and go hunting.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:01 (nineteen years ago)

IF WE DO NOT SOLVE THIS QUESTION ONCE AND FOR ALL WITHIN 20 POSTS, WE WILL HAVE FAILED.

Then, we should turn our attention to something easier to agree on through argumentation, like abortion.

John Justen will insert a ship in your cat for no additional fee (johnjusten), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:04 (nineteen years ago)

J0hn D's assertion further up about how our colons arent made for the digestion of meat is one the krishnas like to espouse as well

i love how this far-left-spectrum argument gets this close to intelligent design ... also, two words: canine teeth.

literalisp (literalisp), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:15 (nineteen years ago)

which i just remembered get wrongly confused waith carnassials or whatever, so never mind about that part ...

literalisp (literalisp), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:19 (nineteen years ago)

two words: canine teeth.

Talk about "intelligent design." Are you suggesting something other than a man came up with that term? (they're not really canine teeth, they're human teeth, you know) (and they really have nothing to do with how the rest of the body functions).

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:50 (nineteen years ago)

hi i just said that

(they're arguably well-fitted to both corpse- and plant-munching, regardless)

literalisp (literalisp), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:54 (nineteen years ago)

also, if you're really asking, i meant that talking about the body being "designed" or "meant" to do things is more than just rhetorically close to theology

literalisp (literalisp), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:57 (nineteen years ago)

Yeah thats partly why I dont know if I buy such thinking. Also, even as cavemen we ate meat. Why would we have always done so if we weren't supposed to?

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 01:59 (nineteen years ago)

In regards to canine teeth, our bodies still have other organs/functions that are obsolete due to evolution. For example, the appendix or wisdom teeth. We can exist without them and we have developed as a species.

With health issues, don't lots of doctors now recommend not eating red meats or limiting intake because there are links to conditions such as bowel cancer?

I am verging on becoming vegetarian and it is damn hard but it is possible & I rarely eat meat now. I don't eat a lot of dairy, although this is a contentious issue - it's easy to find free-range eggs but what about cheese and butter and yoghurt etc? I'm also going to try and avoid leather products which will probably be the hardest, because I do like a nice pair of shoes.

My reasons:

(1) Dislike the taste of most meat & am grossed out by blood.

(2) Ethical dilemmas: the practices of the animal/meat industry are sickening; animals are sentient creatures who experience suffering; animals are also not instrumental objects to be used and abused just because humans are the dominant species; and human beings have reasoning abilities and the consciousness to alter their behaviour.

(3) Environmental ethics: the mass production of meat/dairy is extremely harmful to the environment, which in turn, affects every living being and society.

(4) It is possible to live healthily without eating meat: to sensibly plan your diet and ensure you get all the important vitamins, protein, iron etc from vegetable alternatives or supplements.

I wouldn't enforce these opinions on anyone else, but think anyone who doesn't think about what they eat and how it has been produced should seriously inform themselves, and then decide whether to continue or not. And yes, there are more ethical ways of eating animal products than others.

salexandra (salexander), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:01 (nineteen years ago)

Cattle mass production and largescale farming (decimating water tables and forests to do so) is certainly something I have issue with, and is the one thing I feel bad about when I do eat meat. I dont however eat fast foods, and I'd like to think my small amount comes from local industry though I could be wrong!

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:03 (nineteen years ago)

I can hardly worry about meats negative health risks though. Im a smoker. I have bigger fish to fry.

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:04 (nineteen years ago)

Why would we have always done so if we weren't supposed to?

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20060907211405AA04xdj

My skin breathes. I guess that means I am an earthworm.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:31 (nineteen years ago)

Also, even as cavemen we ate meat. Why would we have always done so if we weren't supposed to?

-- Trayce (spamspanke...)

trayce brings the logic

haha xpost

and what (ooo), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:33 (nineteen years ago)

"supposed to" = God?

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:34 (nineteen years ago)

cavemen also enjoyed not living past thirty, picking nuts out of their own shit, and bashing the skulls of other cavemen with rocks

and what (ooo), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:42 (nineteen years ago)

It's hard to speculate on what our first conscious ancestors thought about eating meat. I would be more interested in discovering what they thought about their idiot animal parents. "Guys, take a fucking shower, already! And stop flicking your poo." Maybe the first conscious apeman dude was the first vegetarian.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:42 (nineteen years ago)

yeah dude, like, when they ate mushrooms. it totally accelerated our evolution!

latebloomer: none of th movies make scence but they r good. (latebloomer), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:46 (nineteen years ago)

Now why would they eat mushrooms? It's not meat.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:47 (nineteen years ago)

http://homepage.mac.com/chrisgrovich/iblog/C346297543/E20060315221231/Media/caveman-lawyer2.jpg

literalisp (literalisp), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:48 (nineteen years ago)

even his cellphone has yet to evolve

literalisp (literalisp), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:49 (nineteen years ago)

so, your vision of the first conscious human comprises a man delivering a sanctimonious lecture about personal habits.

xp

estela (estela), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:52 (nineteen years ago)

The word "sanctimonious" seems a bit overkill.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:54 (nineteen years ago)

http://rfshqcontent.rfshq.com/dangerouspictures/images/1original.jpg

latebloomer: none of th movies make scence but they r good. (latebloomer), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:55 (nineteen years ago)

Don't worry, latebloomer. Even Gary Coleman has pubes.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:55 (nineteen years ago)

Early hominids were likely mostly vegetarian, but meat played a role in the development of brain size and the evolution into modern humans. However, I don't think the anatomical capacity for humans to eat animals is compelling enough a reason to justify it on ethical grounds (for me...ymmv).

I'm not sure I buy into an argument saying 'the human body is best sutied for x diet' as I'd wager that the human body is adept to handle a variety of diets, provided it is nutritionally balanced.

Dionne Warrick Dunn football psychic hotline (Matt Chesnut), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:56 (nineteen years ago)

"handle"

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:57 (nineteen years ago)

http://www.repmanblog.com/photos/uncategorized/gary_coleman1.jpg

latebloomer: none of th movies make scence but they r good. (latebloomer), Thursday, 2 November 2006 02:58 (nineteen years ago)

latebloomer, I'm talkin' 'bout it's just part of maturing. It has nothing to do with evolution, so no worries.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:01 (nineteen years ago)

thank you for letting me know about these strange and unexpected changes in my body

latebloomer: none of th movies make scence but they r good. (latebloomer), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:05 (nineteen years ago)

"Unexpected?" Then, why do you call yourself "latebloomer?" Surely, you must have sensed there was something different. I hope I have not made you feel self-conscious.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:08 (nineteen years ago)

Hahah yay, finally this thread loses its civility and sinks into the shithole all the other vegetarian threads belong in.

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:17 (nineteen years ago)

arachnid leaf broth started it

latebloomer: none of th movies make scence but they r good. (latebloomer), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:18 (nineteen years ago)

trayce brings the logic

You took me srsly Ethan? Honestly, when you gonna learn. Tch.

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:23 (nineteen years ago)

sinks into the shithole

I thought we had escalated it to the point where it was actually fun!

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:41 (nineteen years ago)

Eh, don't listen to me, I'm not taking this seriously (have you read any of the other vegetarianism threads on ILX? They're an unfortunate mess).

Trayce (trayce), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:45 (nineteen years ago)

Each meat thread has its own flavor and texture. They are all satisfying in their own particular way, but they will rot your insides.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 03:46 (nineteen years ago)

I know I have 5 pounds of undigested ILX in my colon!

nickn (nickn), Thursday, 2 November 2006 06:53 (nineteen years ago)

i eat meat because i don't like to see animals suffering because the moment they die they stop suffering like the rest of us who have to go through some fucking moral dilemma each time we eat to stay alive.

eating meat from free range animals is crueller in that respect because you give them the pretention that they might have a life they can enjoy and then WHOOSH you kill them. at least in a battery farm dying is a step forward and something to look forward to.

ken c (ken c), Thursday, 2 November 2006 13:50 (nineteen years ago)

Trayce, the person you are semi-arguing with STARTED a good half of the completely unreadable vegetarian threads.

I was told to stop being a vegetarian by no less than 3 separate doctors.

Allyzay Eisenschefter (allyzay), Thursday, 2 November 2006 15:29 (nineteen years ago)

i bought some grain-fed chicken breasts and some cranberry-honey-garlic pork sausages today! so exciting.

i eat a lot of fish and shrimp and nuts/seeds but i stopped eating cheese/dairy a while ago and so have tried to increase meat and egg eating. yet still, i don't eat a lot of non-ocean meat. hence excitement over chicken and fancy sausages. i am a fan of protein.

but every body/person is different and some just can't deal with meat. i can totally deal with meat. and when i was vegetarian for a couple years several years ago, my body was unhappy even though i was eating tofu, cheese, nuts, etc. (not junk food.)

rrrobyn, the situation (rrrobyn), Thursday, 2 November 2006 15:38 (nineteen years ago)

Trayce, the person you are semi-arguing with STARTED a good half of the completely unreadable vegetarian threads.

I thought that was kind of funny! Have I read them? No, no, not I! :)

I was told to stop being a vegetarian by no less than 3 separate doctors.

So they weren't conjoined triplets. That's good. I would never trust a 3-headed doctor.

the Adversary (but, still, a friend of yours) (Uri Frendimein), Thursday, 2 November 2006 17:42 (nineteen years ago)

Me neither. Dentist, maybe.

Allyzay Eisenschefter (allyzay), Thursday, 2 November 2006 17:45 (nineteen years ago)

I dunno. Makes it easier to get a second (and third) opinion.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 2 November 2006 17:49 (nineteen years ago)

If he's such a wonderful doctor why can't he be rid of the other heads, is what I'd assume.

Allyzay Eisenschefter (allyzay), Thursday, 2 November 2006 17:50 (nineteen years ago)

Also, the second and third opinions would be very suspicious, imho.

the Adversary (but, still, a friend of yours) (Uri Frendimein), Thursday, 2 November 2006 17:54 (nineteen years ago)

Assuming each head had a distinct brain, your doctor would likely be jerky, uncoordinated, and fractious. However much this might make him or her a bad surgeon, it wouldn't necessarily detract from their ability to dispense medical advice. There's also the chance that you might receive advice from one not to give up meat, from another to make sure you get enough vegetables, and from the crazy third one a recommendation to make sure you consume enough dessert, cheese and booze. We're talking medical advice to eat at least a three course dinner!

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 2 November 2006 18:00 (nineteen years ago)

ken that's not meat you're eating...

banrique (blueski), Thursday, 2 November 2006 18:00 (nineteen years ago)

With 3 heads you might get a doctor that looks at _you_ instead of his fucking computer screen and/or prescription pad

(or is it just my doctor that's an unsociable dick?)

ONIMO's losing the plot (GerryNemo), Thursday, 2 November 2006 18:04 (nineteen years ago)

I like the crazy third option best.

Also, I think that's your doctor. 90% of the doctors I've gone to have been inappropriately friendly and pally and sympathetic. It's like, yr not my bro, just tell me what is wrong with me and stop chumming it up, sir.

Allyzay Eisenschefter (allyzay), Thursday, 2 November 2006 18:33 (nineteen years ago)

I have a laconic doctor that I love. No bedside manner. No chumminess. To the point and as fast as other doctors but able to tell me more info.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 2 November 2006 18:41 (nineteen years ago)

vegetarians are fine, vegans are psychos.

shookout (shookout), Thursday, 2 November 2006 18:55 (nineteen years ago)

Nothing beats stuffing meat in your pie-hole. It's surprising more people don't like mincemeat pie. People stuff meat in their pie-hole and sometimes even in their cornhole, but I've never heard of anyone stuffing pie in their meat-hole. Although I've seen corn stuffed in all three.

Scorpion Tea (Dick Butkus), Thursday, 2 November 2006 23:35 (nineteen years ago)

seven years pass...

http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/how-americans-used-to-eat/371895/

Early Americans settlers were “indifferent” farmers, according to many accounts. They were fairly lazy in their efforts at both animal husbandry and agriculture, with “the grain fields, the meadows, the forests, the cattle, etc, treated with equal carelessness,” as one 18th-century Swedish visitor described—and there was little point in farming since meat was so readily available.

Settlers recorded the extraordinary abundance of wild turkeys, ducks, grouse, pheasant, and more. Migrating flocks of birds would darken the skies for days. The tasty Eskimo curlew was apparently so fat that it would burst upon falling to the earth, covering the ground with a sort of fatty meat paste. (New Englanders called this now-extinct species the “doughbird.”)

In the woods, there were bears (prized for their fat), raccoons, bobo­links, opossums, hares, and virtual thickets of deer—so much that the colo­nists didn’t even bother hunting elk, moose, or bison, since hauling and conserving so much meat was considered too great an effort. A European traveler describing his visit to a Southern plantation noted that the food included beef, veal, mutton, venison, turkeys, and geese, but he does not mention a single vegetable.

Infants were fed beef even before their teeth had grown in. The English novelist Anthony Trollope reported, during a trip to the United States in 1861, that Americans ate twice as much beef as did Englishmen. Charles Dickens, when he visited, wrote that “no breakfast was breakfast” without a T-bone steak. Apparently, starting a day on puffed wheat and low-fat milk—our “Breakfast of Champions!”—would not have been considered adequate even for a servant.

Indeed, for the first 250 years of American history, even the poor in the United States could afford meat or fish for every meal. The fact that the workers had so much access to meat was precisely why observers regarded the diet of the New World to be superior to that of the Old.

j., Monday, 2 June 2014 14:53 (twelve years ago)

five years pass...

sweet sweeet doughbird

j., Wednesday, 7 August 2019 01:43 (six years ago)

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/06/dining/butchers-meat-vegetarian-vegan.html

One of the central questions in the book is whether Mr. Pollan can bring himself to kill an animal — first some chickens, then a wild pig — for his own dinner.

“It seemed to me not too much to ask of a meat eater, which I was then and still am,” he wrote, “that at least once in his life he take some direct responsibility for the killing on which his meat eating depends.”

This challenge struck a chord with many people, including vegans and vegetarians looking to change the factory-farming system.

For Janice Schindler, 28, who was a vegan for five years and is now the general manager of the Meat Hook butcher shop in Brooklyn, the animal in question was a turkey at a “Kill Your Own Thanksgiving Dinner” event at a local farm.

“It was really morbid. I was the only one who signed up,” she said. “I’d never killed anything before. Turkeys are such large animals. But when you put them in a poultry cone upside down, they completely relax. Then you can cut an artery. It stuns them and they bleed. I spent the rest of the day working the eviscerating station. It was super-gross, but I found it fascinating.”

That experience was the gateway to her training as a butcher, which she began immediately afterward.

preposterous

j., Wednesday, 7 August 2019 01:44 (six years ago)

There are eight million stories in the naked city, and some of them are presented to you by the NYT in all their preposterous glory.

A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 06:15 (six years ago)

I been workin' all day
Down at the Evisceration Station
To bring home the bacon
To you babe

Thank You (Fattekin Mice Elf Control Again) (Noel Emits), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 08:43 (six years ago)


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