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THE Vegetarian Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby manu » Mon 26 Mar 2007, 03:27:47

Yes in India, in the past, they had four castes and it wasnt by birth, but by qualities. The upper three didnt eat meat except for the Kshatriyas who could practice their fighting skills by hunting and could eat the meat. The fourth class, the sudras sometimes ate fish or birds. Lower than these were the melechas and chandalas, the meat eaters and dog eaters. No one ate the cow!
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby max_power29 » Mon 26 Mar 2007, 03:34:04

NO! The state should not do anything except for commit suicide!
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby happycrop » Sat 05 May 2007, 08:25:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SoothSayer', 'C')heck out the design of your teeth sometime.

Humans are OMNIVORES ... we are designed/evolved to eat vegetables ... and MEAT.

WRONG. We're designed to be able to eat meat (and raw meat only - cooked meat is partly responsible our species' and meat-eating Western society's cancer levels, hence vegetarians in the West get 3 times less cancer and live 7 years longer than their meat-eating neighbours), among many other things. Humans have the ability to obtain every one of our essential nutrients from non-animal sources, provided the soil we live off of contains the right minerals, as it used to. Find me just one nutrient that humans can obtain only through eating animal products, and I will concede that we are designed to need meat. So far the desperate meat and dairy industries, despite their best efforts, have failed to validly do so, so I doubt anyone here can either.

It's like saying we're designed to need nuts. We're not. We can live with no deficiencies at all on a diet without that particular food group, even though we're designed to be able to get nutrients from them if we do include them.
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby Bas » Sat 05 May 2007, 08:38:36

Considering you need ten times the amount of land for a calorie of meat vs vegetable, I don't think it's such a bad idea; A ban wouldn't work though, maybe a meat tax would be better; thinking about that I would actually be a big proponent of that.
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby jato » Sat 05 May 2007, 08:40:26

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As long as there are humans, weapons and animals, we will always have meat!
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...and Mr. Meaty!
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby jato » Sat 05 May 2007, 08:45:19

Okay, so we take away the meat and increase the world population to over 10 billion!?! What for!?! We will eventually wind up in the same overpopulation mess we are in right now!


Oh that’s right, we are going to limit reproduction as well! What a wonderful world it will be! Freedom was overrated anyway!

[/sarcasm]
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby Ebyss » Sat 05 May 2007, 09:10:48

Seriously, do you have any idea of the amount of animals shot each year just to maintain the grain harvest? A meat-free diet is not a dead-animal-free diet.

In the UK alone 5 million pigeons are shot each year to try and prevent them ruining the grain harvest. Imagine how many more you'd have to shoot if everyone went veggie and ate more grain and veg. This applies to organic farmers as well - I heard a story (yes, shock horror - anecdotal evidence!) about an organic potato farmer who would routinely shoot deer in the gut so they would limp off to the forest and die there instead of in his potato crop.

Not all land is suitable for growing soyabeans either - up here in the mountains we just can't grow grain (not on a large scale anyway, which is no bad thing, but another topic altogether, since we're talking about feeding the world here), but we grow sheep and some cattle very nicely indeed. Sure, we can all grow our own veg and battle with the rabbits, pigeons and deer on a personal level (by eating them, not wasting them as is currently done to keep veg and grain harvests up).

Deer and rabbits have never been so plentiful in the UK and Ireland because for some reason we don't eat them anymore - it's borderline taboo. So the government resorts to culling, and hunters get to kill a certain amount of animals per year. This has to be done to prevent these "pests" from ruining grain harvests. The real tragedy is not that animals are killed, but that they are wasted because of some idiotic notion that we're not supposed to eat "the cute ones".

While man can live very well without meat, I would suggest that unless he grows every last morsel of it himself, he cannot be sure that he is eating an animal-free/cruelty-free meal.

I'm not sure if the UN numbers about feeding the world with veganism take into account the numbers of pests killed each year in mainstream agriculture (and what to do with the cadavers), and I don't know whether they've said that they can feed the world using organic-type agriculture that supports wildlife, but if not then their numbers are somewhat skewed. Are their numbers based on the yields created by artificial pesticides, fertilisers and herbicides (which also contribute to GW)?

Now, I do agree that we shouldn't be eating so much meat, and we certainly shouldn't be farming cows in the intensive manner that happens today. It's so wrong it's not even funny. But banning meat will just cause a whole host of other problems for nature that it doesn't even bear thinking about. Large scale agriculture, both for meat and grain/veg, is the big problem here - and the only way that I can see to deal with this is to have a big die-off so the world *can* support the remaining population with organic/permaculture/small scale farming - which includes meat, but to a lesser extent than we're used to today.


As for whether vegetarianism should be mandatory? I'm a human being, and I will eat meat if I choose to. Seriously, why people should ever be denied fresh air, water or food that we are designed to eat (whether we choose to or not) is beyond me. To actually support an idea like this is sheer insanity. The problem isn't that there are too many animals, it's that there are too many people. Perhaps we should think about culling the latter before we discuss culling the former. How about making it mandatory?
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby Newsseeker » Sat 05 May 2007, 09:36:05

I am convinced that the energy we could save from eating a vegetarian or vegan diet is such that the harmful effects of peak oil could be pushed back several years. I wonder if the grain market would collapse, though. On the flip side, according to the Goebbels diaries the last leader with the power and will to mandate vegetarianism was old Uncle Adolf. Not quite sure if mandating is a good idea.
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby killJOY » Sat 05 May 2007, 09:44:34

Your typical grain-fed hyppy is a toothsome delight. Not too fatty, not too stringy.

Tastier than most grease-fed amerrrrikans.
Peak oil = comet Kohoutek.
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby Ebyss » Sat 05 May 2007, 09:58:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') am convinced that the energy we could save from eating a vegetarian or vegan diet is such that the harmful effects of peak oil could be pushed back several years


How so? In order to grow more grain successfully one would have to plough more land, seed more land, harvest more land and transport more grain - you ever seen one of those super-tractors? How much oil would they burn just trying to grow your grain. Not to mention all the NG needed to make your fertilisers and herbicides - and getting all that tp the farms in the first place (more oil).

I remember seeing on po.com a while back, this picture of a modern American farm using shrink wrap (plastic warp, ceran wrap or something like that in America?) on their fields to prevent the newly applied fertiliser from being blown away/run off by the weather. Now if that isn't the biggest waste of oil (to make the plastic wrap) I don't know what is. This was to grow grain btw.

Like I said, I agree that the amount of meat animals should be reduced, and that humans should be eating less of it - but only if we also reduce our own population at the same time. We are over-burdening the planet by our intensive meat production; overburdening it by growing more grain from it's already depleted soils is just creating more problems, not solving them.

I feel I should also add that humans aren't really designed to eat grains as a major part of their diet - if you look at hunter gatherers and paleolithic diets, grains do feature, but on a much smaller scale than we ingest today. A paleo diet was for the most part grain-free, bean-free, potato-free, dairy-free and sugar-free. It consisted mostly of meat, fish, fruit, nuts and berries. Wheat allergies are very common in today's society - and high GI foods (most processed grain and fluffy white potatoes) are heavily implicated in diabetes. A paleo diet was for the most part grain-free, bean-free, potato-free, dairy-free and sugar-free. It consisted mostly of meat, fish, fruit, nuts and berries. This varies according to location and climate naturally.
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby billg » Sat 05 May 2007, 11:27:53

I say bring back the wolves! And make it a high crime to kill a wolf. The wolf is not so removed from our domesticated dog friend, so why not extend him the same protections we do in the "civilized" West.

With the wolf back in the neighborhood, we won't need to worry so much about defending our vegetable crops. The wolves will take care of the deer, woodchucks, raccoons, and rabbits if they become too numerous. No more need for fences, which often don't work so well. In fact, I say we should ban fences.

The wolves will be a deterrant to raising animals for food or even having pets (the wolves will be our new best friend). If a cattle farmer needs to worry about having half his herd culled by wolves (remember fences are banned), there won't be much of an incentive to be a cattle farmer.

Once all the animal farmers go out of business, we can plant those pastures with trees like fast-growing hybrid poplar or an invasive running variety of bamboo, which has many human uses. This will be a big boost to carbon sequestration, with all those pastures turning back for forest. We will be able to feed more humans on much less land with less energy expended on defending those lands.

It's time to let the wolves be wolves and the humans be humanes. That extra "e" was intended. Humans are top dog right now and we're doing a really poor job. Humans are way too intelligent and blood-thirsty to play the role of top dog.

hint..this is a crazy half-serious rant from a vegan who continues to be disgusted by human behavior on a daily basis.
"It is no measure of health to be deemed sane in an insane society" J. Krishnamurti

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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby Ebyss » Sat 05 May 2007, 11:45:32

As a full on carnivore who also happens to be an animal lover, I like your idea BillG. I'll just get me some of them enormous cattle dogs who fend off wolves and guard my small herd of meat-animals. The Maasai lived with lions, leopards, hyena right on their doorstep and still managed to be hunters/gatherers/shepherds - without the use of guns. The Native Americans did the same (bar the shepherding), but it was wolves and bears they had to share their home with. Not so anymore, but it once was.

But instead of growing just bamboo and fast growing poplars, we should be creating vast swathes of deciduous forest with an abundance of fruit and nut trees, tubers, veg, berries, filling it with native wildlife (we had wolves in Ireland, I say bring 'em back) and maintaining a strict code of ethics - only X amount of game to be removed per year (even with wolves there was still plenty of game to go around for the local human population). We should remove large scale monoculture and grain production from our food production system, since it is responsible for huge tracts of wildlife-habitat loss, and creates greenhouse gases when using fertilisers etc.

Of course, all of that will only work if we drastically reduce our population and learn not to be so damn greedy.
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby cynicalheretic » Sun 06 May 2007, 02:03:18

A little heads up for all of you!

You take my fucking steak away, and I am going to eat you!!!

Fuck this vegan nazi shit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Re: Should the State make vegetarianism mandatory?

Unread postby DavidFolks » Sun 06 May 2007, 06:27:57

From another topic, "We don't need animal products"

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DavidFolks', 'I')'m not going to go on about moral stances or opinion about what a human being needs to eat to be healthy.

I agree that human beings are designed with the capacity to derive nourishment from several sources, and do not necessarily need to eat meat.

If you look at historical Inuit culture though, you'll find that humans can survive with very little in the way of plant matter as well.

The point to this post is twofold:

1) We are lucky to live in a culture that allows us the choice of being vegan. While we can live on plant matter only, it is only a sustainable choice in areas where we can grow everything sufficient to our dietary needs. In some areas, growing seasons are not conducive to raising the plants in combinations we need for balanced nutrition, and we supplement with animal proteins and fatty acids.

2) Cost of energy to ship sufficient variety of plant nutrients to supply our dietary needs is where the peak oil effect comes into play. Local fruits, vegetables, nuts, and animal proteins from small, diverse farms are a sustainable way to feed communities. Shipping food around the world is not.


And how are we defining vegetarianism?

Do vegetarians eat eggs, milk, cheese?

Do they eat poultry, fish?

Is vegetarianism defined only as not eating red meat?

What's the main difference between a vegetarian and a vegan?

In my own opinion, a vegetarian consumes animal products, but not animal flesh. A vegan consumes no animal products.

At any rate, to answer the topic question; I believe the state should be limited in its power to mandate anything, and certainly don't want it interfering with my diet.
If we knew what we were doing, it wouldn't be called research. ~A. Einstein

TANSTAAFL ~R.A.H.

The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The next best time is today. ~Chinese proverb
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THE Vegetarian Thread (merged)

Unread postby mattduke » Thu 31 May 2007, 14:29:08

Secret plans to encourage the nation to give up eating meat are being examined by the Government. A leaked e-mail expresses sympathy for the environmental benefits of a mass switch to a vegan diet - a strict form of vegetarianism which bans milk, dairy products and fish.

The change would need to be done "gently" because of a "risk of alienating the public", according to the document. The extreme policy is being examined on the basis it could make a major contribution to slowing climate change. Daily Mail

I am not the only person on this forum that's noticed many of the "global warming" related government policies have an uncanny similarity to policies some officials might believe would mitigate the effects of decreasingly available supplies of oil. Also, I am not the only person who believes decreasing supplies of energy will force most people to change their diets and consume less animal products due to their increasing expense. Amongst those who don't expect out and out starvation, that is a common belief. A story on the possible government regulation in this area is therefore interesting.
Last edited by Ferretlover on Mon 02 Mar 2009, 18:28:16, edited 2 times in total.
Reason: Merge thread; moved to Open Forum.
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Re: UK: The secret plans to turn us all vegetarian

Unread postby Gazzatrone » Thu 31 May 2007, 14:42:52

Slowing down climate change? Hmmm. One of the most petrol reliant industries, supporting a supposed aid to slowing down climate change? Doesn't burning petrol....oh well, good to know those Whitehall bods are on the ball.
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Re: UK: The secret plans to turn us all vegetarian

Unread postby frankthetank » Thu 31 May 2007, 15:32:12

Somehow raise the prices of meat products and you'll force a change. Its crazy how cheap meat calories are.
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Re: UK: The secret plans to turn us all vegetarian

Unread postby mmasters » Thu 31 May 2007, 16:05:55

Well vegans are less likely to rebel with any force that's for sure; protein brings out the warrior in us. A vegan populace is an easy one to control and or powerdown. They definitely wont stop feeding meat to the military though. :twisted:
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Re: UK: The secret plans to turn us all vegetarian

Unread postby Twilight » Thu 31 May 2007, 16:10:57

Mid-century we will all be eating vegetarian burgers, alright. Just not quite the way they intended... :twisted:
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