by MrBill » Fri 13 Oct 2006, 10:14:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Battle_Scarred_Galactico', '[')b]The last vegan that argued with me that she hadn't eaten meat or drank milk or used animal products of any kind in 8-years, and never felt better, got bitten by a mosquito in Africa and died of malaria this year.
I agree 100% with your views on vegans, they always look tremedously unhealthy and have zero muscle, but wouldn't catching malaria in Africa finish off pretty much anyone. Its' not exactly a beacon of medical science out there.
True. I have never battled malaria myself, and you're probably right that African hospitals are probably not the best, but population numbers in Africa are growing, not falling, and racial sterotyping and generalizing aside, there seems to me at a tenuous link between general health and fighting diseases or illnesses.
Who is more likely to survive invasive surgery? A young healthy person, or an older person in fragile health with multiple problems already? If you're body is going to lose 25-50% of its overall strength to battle an illness, better to start with extra reserves.
There is no doubt that a balanced diet, including a vegetarian one, could provide all the nutrients, and amino acids, necessary to survive, but fish and animal protein have beneficial properties not available in plants. They also do have some side effects like being higher in saturated fats and cholesterol, so naturally I am advocating a diet high in fruit and fiber and low in those more harmful byproducts of animal protein.
But I am saying, yes, we can grow more calories of plant protein per acre than if we feed animals, but that is also not the answer to problems of over population either. Population reduction is. Or one could say, 'you have your 15 kids and eat grain, I will have no children and eat whatever I like. Fair enough?'
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.