PorkChop wrote:Wish I could be vegetarian full time.
I definitely see the ethics of it but habits & social conventions are hard to break.
2006 was the longest I ever lasted as a vegetarian - roughly about a month.
This year I lasted about 12 days before getting stuck at a restaurant on my wife's birthday with no vegetarian options.
I'm shooting for making Sundays my no meat days.
In the mean time I try to make sure the meat that I do eat is as ethical as possible.
I get pre-cooked meals from a place that's all organic and free-range whenever possible.
They have an agreement with a chicken farm outside of town that's all free range and ethical.
They get their veggies from local farmers markets.
I atone in the ways I can.
If I ever make boddhisattva, my first priority will be to ease the suffering of every being I've eaten.
mindyourmind wrote:How about two days a week ......![]()
That way you double the good work you are doing.
PorkChop wrote:mindyourmind wrote:How about two days a week ......![]()
That way you double the good work you are doing.
Let me get the one day down pat first and then I'll work towards two.
I'm still establishing my routine and am coming off a pretty poor weekend.
I'll get there eventually.
mindyourmind wrote:I'm just kidding with you. One day a week is an awesome beginning. Keep it up.



Jeff Novick wrote:Olive Oil & The Mediterranean Diet are a HOAX!
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The information that has been translated into the "Mediterranean Diet" came from a study that found low rates of heart disease amongst those living on the Isle of Crete in the late 1950's. While [these] people did consume olives, avocados, olive oil and other monunsaturated fats, their diets were predominately fresh fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes with small amounts of animal protein.
Part of the reason for this was the community was very economically depressed as they were recovering from a recent time of war. Additionally, they were very active, walking an average of 9 miles a day.
This dietary and exercise pattern, that was evident on the Isle of Crete in the late 50's, no longer exist there (nor anywhere else in the Mediterranean).
...
Thrasymachus wrote:I saw "Tofurky Roast & Gravy" available at the local supermarket and decided to buy one to try it since it is past Thanksgiving and they probably won't be restocked. I cooked it with potatoes, celery and carrots, and spices. It was tasty, and soy-substantially equivalent to real Turkey, but no animals had to die!
Thrasymachus wrote:I don't think non vegans know how far faux meat has come.
Thrasymachus wrote:Also it is just simply healthier as people are not physiologically adapted to eat meat
Speth JD (1991) "Protein selection and avoidance strategies of contemporary and ancestral foragers: unresolved issues." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B, vol. 334, pp. 265-270.
[S]tone tools and fossil bones--the latter commonly displaying distinctive cut-marks produced when a carcass is dismembered and stripped of edible flesh with a sharp-edged stone flake--are found together on many Plio-Pleistocene archaeological sites, convincing proof that by at least 2.0 to 2.5 Ma [million years ago] before present (BP) these early hominids did in fact eat meat (Bunn 1986; Isaac and Crader 1981). In contrast, plant remains are absent or exceedingly rare on these ancient sites and their role in early hominid diet, therefore, can only be guessed on the basis of their known importance in contemporary forager diets, as well as their potential availability in Plio-Pleistocene environments (for example, see Peters et al. (1984); Sept (1984). Thus few today doubt that early hominids ate meat, and most would agree that they probably consumed far more meat than did their primate forebears. Instead, most studies nowadays focus primarily on how that meat was procured; that is, whether early hominids actively hunted animals, particularly large-bodied prey, or scavenged carcasses...
I fully concur with the view that meat was a regular and important component of early hominid diet. For this, the archaeological and taphonomic evidence is compelling.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:Thrasymachus wrote:I saw "Tofurky Roast & Gravy" available at the local supermarket and decided to buy one to try it since it is past Thanksgiving and they probably won't be restocked. I cooked it with potatoes, celery and carrots, and spices. It was tasty, and soy-substantially equivalent to real Turkey, but no animals had to die!
I am going more vegetarian every day.
However, to grow all of that stuff, millions of beings were killed.
Let's not kid ourselves!!!
To eat turkey meat, well, you only have to kill one creature...the turkey.
Or you could just amputate the legs and just eat them I suppose,
and then the turkey wouldn't have to die.
But then, if it was a free-range turkey its options would be very limited.
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practitioner wrote:To grow all the stuff to feed the turkey those same beings died. And it takes more grain to feed a turkey to maturity than it does to make one Tofurkey so I would be careful about using that logic.
practitioner wrote:PadmaVonSamba wrote:Thrasymachus wrote:I saw "Tofurky Roast & Gravy" available at the local supermarket and decided to buy one to try it since it is past Thanksgiving and they probably won't be restocked. I cooked it with potatoes, celery and carrots, and spices. It was tasty, and soy-substantially equivalent to real Turkey, but no animals had to die!
I am going more vegetarian every day.
However, to grow all of that stuff, millions of beings were killed.
Let's not kid ourselves!!!
To eat turkey meat, well, you only have to kill one creature...the turkey.
Or you could just amputate the legs and just eat them I suppose,
and then the turkey wouldn't have to die.
But then, if it was a free-range turkey its options would be very limited.
.
.
.
To grow all the stuff to feed the turkey those same beings died. And it takes more grain to feed a turkey to maturity than it does to make one Tofurkey so I would be careful about using that logic.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:I am going more vegetarian every day.
However, to grow all of that stuff, millions of beings were killed.
Let's not kid ourselves!!!
To eat turkey meat, well, you only have to kill one creature...the turkey.
Or you could just amputate the legs and just eat them I suppose,
and then the turkey wouldn't have to die.
But then, if it was a free-range turkey its options would be very limited.
.
.
.
Zealot wrote:
So are you saying that the life of one turkey is less valuable than the lives of a couple hundred or thousand insects? Or more valuable? I'm confused.
Zealot wrote:
In the book Im reading right now, The Words of My Perfect Teacher
PadmaVonSamba wrote:I am going more vegetarian every day.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:However, to grow all of that stuff, millions of beings were killed.
Let's not kid ourselves!!!
To eat turkey meat, well, you only have to kill one creature...the turkey.
Or you could just amputate the legs and just eat them I suppose,
and then the turkey wouldn't have to die.
Thrasymachus wrote:1.) You cannot do the impossible, so don't do the possible.
Basically this argument maintains that since even eating plant foods involves killing insects and micro-organisms, that the meat abstainers are no different or better. But trying to do the impossible always results in failure. Does this mean we should not do what is possible in terms of saving lives? Does that sound a very compassionate or enlightened argument? It sounds like a very bad excuse to bring down the bar of ethics and compassion to satisfy the attachment of those with certain taste preferences.
PadmaVonSamba wrote:I was responding to the statement "...but no animals had to die"
PorkChop wrote:Oh I know... Tofurkey is the nastiest stuff I've ever eaten.
Thrasymachus wrote:@PadmaVonSamba:PorkChop wrote:Oh I know... Tofurkey is the nastiest stuff I've ever eaten.
There are actually peoples who have eaten raw meat extensively.
The article you posted mis-attributed the fact that animal remains -- bones were found and imputed something about plant foods. If you bury animals, their bones can remain a long time and preserve better, but if you bury a sack of potatoes with the same weight it will just return to the earth by decomposition unless it fossilizes somehow. So it is not strange that mostly animal remains can be found. However that is not what the latest research points to:
Scientific American: Human Ancestors Were Nearly All Vegetarians
Are you even serious about the last paragraph?
Thrasymachus wrote:@PadmaVonSamba:PadmaVonSamba wrote:I am going more vegetarian every day.
I am glad you are able to make a joke out of the intense suffering and deaths of billions of beings for no reason other than: taste preference, displaying domination, displaying the most conspicuous consumption from the most wasteful possible food source in terms of inputs put in. However, you keep arguing for and creating apologia for meat eating, so I doubt the sincerity of all your allusions to vegetarianism.
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