Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

THE Energy & Meat Thread (merged)

How to save energy through both societal and individual actions.

Do you think meat consumption reduction could save oil and delay peak oil problems?

Poll ended at Sat 11 Mar 2006, 01:27:27

Yes, I'm a vegan and if everyone was, the world would be a more peaceful place.
14
No votes
Yes, but I eat meat. It doesn't matter what I do. It's what everyone does that matters.
6
No votes
No, Jevon's Paradox still applies.
9
No votes
No, there are other ways to reduce oil consumption than to deny people an essential food group.
14
No votes
No, I deny the facts presented in this post.
5
No votes
Yes, but the MEAT lobby will never let that happen.
7
No votes
No, it's too late to implement anything to stave off any peak oil effects.
6
No votes
No, it is a cultural possibility for people to stop eating something that has been the centerpiece of their meals.
2
No votes
No, meat will get more expensive as oil gets more expensive and the market will handle it.
18
No votes
 
Total votes : 81

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby Grifter » Wed 03 May 2006, 10:52:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eastbay', '
')But back to the excellent topic of this thread... eating farm harvested animals is as wasteful as commuting solo in a Hummer. I find it peculiar, maybe even hypocritical, when many of those calling for rational energy use consume factory animals, which is a horribly wasteful use of energy, particularly as humanity enters the peak oil era.


Well I don't know if its already been mentioned, I came to the thread a bit late but animal dung improves the fertility of land extremely efficiently. That should surely be factored into the cost equation.

I agree we should eat less meat. We will still need to domesticate animals to some extent, we may as well eat the meat at the end of their (useful) life.

Eventually I expect humans wont eat meat but that day is far away.
User avatar
Grifter
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 796
Joined: Wed 29 Mar 2006, 04:00:00
Location: England

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby aldente » Sat 06 May 2006, 05:48:24

There will be no need to eat human meat 'Grifter' for two reasons:
PO will hit really hard and much faster as the Hubbert curve indicates and secondly, it will hit faster than expected (duuuh)
Image
Oh, sorry it was about animal dung and animal meat (not Soilent Green). G.I. Gurdjieff once noted that Big Nature will eat us up just as we eat up farmed animals.
User avatar
aldente
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 1554
Joined: Fri 20 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby untothislast » Sat 06 May 2006, 05:58:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Grifter', 'W')ell I don't know if its already been mentioned, I came to the thread a bit late but animal dung improves the fertility of land extremely efficiently. That should surely be factored into the cost equation.

I agree we should eat less meat. We will still need to domesticate animals to some extent, we may as well eat the meat at the end of their (useful) life.

Eventually I expect humans wont eat meat but that day is far away.


Points I can agree with. The relationship can be mutually beneficial, non-exploitative and - when the animal dies its own natural death (if you wish to) you can eat it.
User avatar
untothislast
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 686
Joined: Sat 22 Oct 2005, 03:00:00
Location: European Capital of Kulcha 2008

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby aldente » Sat 06 May 2006, 06:04:13

you are repeating yourself unthosislast (could you choose a screen name easier to quote next time please).
[img]
Last edited by aldente on Sun 07 May 2006, 11:59:30, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
aldente
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 1554
Joined: Fri 20 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby untothislast » Sat 06 May 2006, 15:08:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('albente', 'y')ou are repeating yourself unthosislast (could you choose a screen name easier to quote next time please).


Irrefutable common sense - in the face of wilful ignorance - always bears repetition. Irrefutable common sense - in the face of wilful ignorance - always bears repetition. Irrefutable common sense - in the face of wilful ignorance - always bears repetition etc. etc.
User avatar
untothislast
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 686
Joined: Sat 22 Oct 2005, 03:00:00
Location: European Capital of Kulcha 2008

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby TheTurtle » Sat 06 May 2006, 15:32:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('albente', 'y')ou are repeating yourself unthosislast


Duplicate post deleted.

Now, for those of us who our getting a bit denser in our senior years, would you mind explaining the point of the photo you posted, albente?
:?
“Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.” (Ted Perry)
User avatar
TheTurtle
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1905
Joined: Sat 14 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Along the banks of the muddy Mississippi

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby Grifter » Sat 06 May 2006, 17:30:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('untothislast', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Grifter', 'W')ell I don't know if its already been mentioned, I came to the thread a bit late but animal dung improves the fertility of land extremely efficiently. That should surely be factored into the cost equation.

I agree we should eat less meat. We will still need to domesticate animals to some extent, we may as well eat the meat at the end of their (useful) life.

Eventually I expect humans wont eat meat but that day is far away.


Points I can agree with. The relationship can be mutually beneficial, non-exploitative and - when the animal dies its own natural death (if you wish to) you can eat it.


I don't have a problem with killing the animal towards the end of its useful life. If animals were/are sentient then I'm sure that to live is better than not to live at all.

I wouldn't have a problem with killing a pig after only a couple of years. If someone wasn't going to fatten it up and kill it then it wouldn't exist in the first place. The pig would improve the fertility of my land and might even be lucky enough to become a breeder and then live a good many years. This seems natural, economical and just a little bit unfair to the pig. If my last moments were/are to be killed and eaten by another animal then so be it, I wouldn't complain.

I have seen chimpanzees looking in awe at a waterfall, after that I considered not eating meat for purely emotional reasons. If chimps can appreciate nature and are thus sentient where do you draw the line? After much soul searching I decided that it was right for ME to eat meat. That is if I know where its from although this is often difficult, salami for instance, which is why I'm learning to make my own.(My first try was an abismal failure).

albente, I'm quite fascinated by the macabre thought of canibalism. Should I be worried? :) It doesn't mean I think we will all turn into zombies. Humans I think would taste foul. The disgusting processed crap we eat. If we were to find out that our pork had been raised with the stuff we eat there would be uproar. People can dissociate the idea of a hormone injection with the physical act of eating crap.
User avatar
Grifter
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 796
Joined: Wed 29 Mar 2006, 04:00:00
Location: England
Top

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby aldente » Sun 07 May 2006, 12:07:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TheTurtle', 'N')ow, for those of us who our getting a bit denser in our senior years, would you mind explaining the point of the photo you posted, albente?
:?


My pics are well selected art and don't always stand necessarily in direct context with the topic nature. They are meant to stimulate and give access the more subconscious levels of the brain where they (hopefully) trigger what is referred to sometimes as thought processes 'outside of the box'. This is encouraged even more when they are actually out of context or at least not in obvious context. Those who don't bother simply see a nuisence post, others might get the humor in some of them and which makes it easier to deal with the underlaying 'doomsday vibe' on this forum. I mean how serious can one walk through live?

Image
User avatar
aldente
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 1554
Joined: Fri 20 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby gg3 » Mon 08 May 2006, 06:17:36

Untothislast, thanks for copping to an error, and sorry if I sounded harsh back there.

Raod kill: eat at your own risk. Some people get away with it. Some people get away with not wearing seatbelts or not washing their hands after they poop, and in some parts of the world, people routinely eat animal brains (just say Prions!).

Animals: I'll go further than the chimp example.

I happen to think that most of our food-animals are conscious and have emotional states that we would recognize as being similar to our own. The rationale for this is well-understood neurophysiology plus a rather complicated bit of psychophysics which would be a digression to do in detail here (look up Hameroff & Penrose and start reading and thinking about it).

So, chickens, pigs, sheep, cows, and also rabbits and so on, have feelings and are self-aware. For all we know, fish also have feelings and, above a certain size brain mass, are self-aware to some degree. And yet for most humans, there is some form of meat in the diet, and it's not going to disappear entirely.

In the state of nature we're hunter/gatherers. The hunter part kills animals and eats them. On average (with exceptions such as the Innuit) meat makes up a relatively small percentage of the diet but it is still there. Biologically, we've evolved that way. We do not know enough about nutrition to know that we can take all meat out of the diet without any loss of vital nutrients (that is, we do not know everything there is to know about the nutrients in our diets). There is probably individual variance here, along a normal curve from some people needing no meat at all, to some needing a large amount. (I've found that I can get by with two servings of beef per week, but below that I get run-down and tend to get sick, even when following the best available information re. vegetarian food combining.)

Ideally we will find a way to grow meat in vats: if we can grow organs, we can grow "meat" that is indistinguishable from "the real thing." This would remove entirely the issue of cruelty to animals.

In the meantime, it is incumbent upon us to find ways to slaughter animals that are painless or as nearly so as possible (and by pain I also include the stress of awareness of impending doom). I have a citation somewhere in my files about an academic in Colorado who has looked into this in some detail and developed a "best practices" standard that appears to fulfill this need.

As a practical matter, I can tell you what the discussion in our community-planning group has been in this area. There is a degree of consensus on hunting as a source of meat, particularly in the event of disruption in the conventional meat supply. There has also been discussion of the issue of shooting animals that intrude into agricultural plots (gardens etc.). The latter is an outgrowth of the necessity to protect a food supply from predation by wild critters, for example deer. Clearly it's in a hunter's interest to kill an animal quickly, which is to say, more humanely than otherwise: the better to recover the carcass quickly for processing.

In any case, the cruelty issue isn't relevant to dairy and eggs (nor to wool as a source of fiber for clothing, blankets, etc.). This of course requires that cows and chickens (and sheep) are being kept under humane conditions, which can be reasonably assured in a local production scenario.
User avatar
gg3
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 3271
Joined: Mon 24 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: California, USA

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby smallpoxgirl » Mon 08 May 2006, 19:40:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'R')aod kill: eat at your own risk. Some people get away with it.

:lol: I trust a good roadkill deer over a chemical laden Tofurky any day.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'S')o, chickens, pigs, sheep, cows, and also rabbits and so on, have feelings and are self-aware.

Pure suposition. Maybe chickens are self aware. Maybe they aren't. Maybe carrots are self aware. Despite all their self agrandizement, neuroscience and psychiatry are incredibly crude rudimentary sciences. We have only the vaguest notions of why depression or schizophrenia happen. Never mind trying to characterize the actual biochemical process of self awareness.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gg3', 'I')n the meantime, it is incumbent upon us to find ways to slaughter animals that are painless or as nearly so as possible (and by pain I also include the stress of awareness of impending doom).

South Park had a great skit about that. All the turkeys got pushed into this little theater. On comes this happy movie. Blue skies, flowers, happy little butterflies....Then a blade comes zipping out of the wall and cuts all their heads off. :-D
"We were standing on the edges
Of a thousand burning bridges
Sifting through the ashes every day
What we thought would never end
Now is nothing more than a memory
The way things were before
I lost my way" - OCMS
User avatar
smallpoxgirl
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7258
Joined: Mon 08 Nov 2004, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby eastbay » Mon 08 May 2006, 23:09:28

pstarr,

Oh man, I agree with you 100%. It's getting more and more difficult to buy quality fruit and vegetables. It only serves to further motivate us to increase the size and diversity of our home gardening.

But eating industrially harvested meat won't happen for so many reasons, but one not mentioned here yet is that it's just downright creepy, I tell ya.
Got Dharma?

Everything is Impermanent. Shakyamuni Buddha
User avatar
eastbay
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7186
Joined: Sat 18 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: One Mile From the Columbia River

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby untothislast » Tue 09 May 2006, 06:28:42

I think it would be a mistake to insist on the possible/actual 'self awareness' of animals as the criterion for our ranking of their relative importance. Mainly, because in insisting on points of similarity to ourselves, we're imposing an anthropocentric world view which is both distorted and unhealthy.

As I've said before (ad nauseam), we exercise a tyranny over more vulnerable species based purely on our ability to do so - and because we find it convenient to waive aside any moral or ethical objections. In addition, allowing this exploitative barbarism to fester away at the root of our society, provides a cultural basis for all those injustices and inequalities we impose on our own fellow human beings.

Just as the (supposed) abolition of the twin horrors of child-labour and racist slavery, allowed humankind to develop a more empathic and sympathetic approach to social relations - so the eventual phasing out of animal exploitation may help us rise above those baser governing instincts which inevitably lead to oppression and war.

Now that's what I'd really call 'self-awareness'.
User avatar
untothislast
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 686
Joined: Sat 22 Oct 2005, 03:00:00
Location: European Capital of Kulcha 2008

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby Doly » Tue 09 May 2006, 07:43:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('untothislast', '
')Just as the (supposed) abolition of the twin horrors of child-labour and racist slavery, allowed humankind to develop a more empathic and sympathetic approach to social relations - so the eventual phasing out of animal exploitation may help us rise above those baser governing instincts which inevitably lead to oppression and war.


Well, it didn't happen in India (where vegetarianism and respect for animals is very common), so I'm not expecting it to happen in the rest of the world.
User avatar
Doly
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 4370
Joined: Fri 03 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Biggest Waste of Oil=MEAT

Unread postby untothislast » Tue 09 May 2006, 07:48:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', 'W')ell, it didn't happen in India (where vegetarianism and respect for animals is very common), so I'm not expecting it to happen in the rest of the world.


They did have Gandhi - which gave them a bit of a headstart on things - unfortunately, someone shot him.

Now the land of the sacred cow has chains of McDonalds doing big biz - work that one out.

(The overall problem with 'religion-driven' vegetarianism, is that it usually promises some self-regarding reward for the next life, or after-life. The version Gandhi promoted, was based essentially on what he recognised as the injustice of animal exploitation, and mankind's debasement by taking an active role).
User avatar
untothislast
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 686
Joined: Sat 22 Oct 2005, 03:00:00
Location: European Capital of Kulcha 2008
Top

Eating meat: I'm not giving that up!

Unread postby HamRadioRocks » Sat 09 Dec 2006, 00:34:22

Another thing I get dinged for in the carbon/ecological footprint surveys is eating meat. What am I supposed to do, go on the Nicole Richie Diet?

Meat is such a major food group that I'm not about to give it up. There were times when none of the meat served in the college dorm was edible. Not eating meat caused me to get this hollow feeling in my heart and go to bed hungry. I had to order pizza or go out to eat in order to avoid starvation.

Even seeing the Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake and its prequel could only kill my appetite for meat for a few days. Even reading _Fast Food Nation_ couldn't kill my appetite for meat for more than a short time.

At 6 feet tall, a weight of 143 pounds, a reasonably low blood cholesterol, and a tiny 30-inch waist, I don't feel a great need to lose weight and drive down my blood cholesterol. Why should I be the one to give up meat? Make the people with those gargantuan 40-inch waistlines give up meat. OK, OK, make everyone with more than a 32-inch waistline give up meat. Make the steakhouses in Amarillo, Texas stop serving those 72-ounce steaks.

But the rest of us should be allowed to eat all the meat we want without feeling like we're endangering the human race. Besides, I'd like to see someone tell Nicole Richie to go meatless.
User avatar
HamRadioRocks
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 98
Joined: Wed 19 Jul 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Eating meat: I'm not giving that up!

Unread postby Jack » Sat 09 Dec 2006, 01:48:57

Gracious! Why would you wish to give up meat at this point in time?

It seems time to mention Jevon's paradox - i.e., if one group conserves a resource, the price will decline. This will stimulate demand, resulting in no net savings.

Now, in future, when transportation and refrigeration may be problematic, the price structure may compel you to modify your diet. Just as it does now. Unless you dine constantly on Kobe beef flown in fresh from Japan each morning?
Jack
Light Sweet Crude
Light Sweet Crude
 
Posts: 4929
Joined: Wed 11 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Eating meat: I'm not giving that up!

Unread postby ohanian » Sat 09 Dec 2006, 03:09:36

Sure Tiger!
User avatar
ohanian
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1553
Joined: Sun 17 Oct 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Eating meat: I'm not giving that up!

Unread postby Micki » Sat 09 Dec 2006, 03:20:23

If things get really bad we will have to eat what we can.
Hope you haven't missed to discussion we had on Jelly fish becoming THE seafood in the near future.
Little bit further down we may see man flesh back on the menu.

Darn, I got caught up in all this. I'm not even a doomer.
Micki
 

PreviousNext

Return to Conservation & Efficiency

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

cron