Meat is tasty. Bacon is the one food makes any other food better just by being in close proximity. My one rule; Never eat a species capable of calculus.
Have your friends recently switched over to plants only or have they been that way their entire lives? Besides, your logic went down the hole when you said your friend ate fish. You can't include meat in your diet and call yourself a vegetarian.The Almighty Aardvark said:The problem I'm having with this argument is that it actually isn't necessary to live. Last I checked all of my vegetarian friends are still kicking. A better argument is that it is very difficult to build muscle and fitness without meat, although it's still not impossible. I have a female friend who competed at an international level in climbing, and was a vegetarian (although she did include fish in her diet).
I also don't believe that our biological design should determine our morals. Making a huge stretch here, but if we had some sort of compartment in our body that was designed solely for crushing the heads of our firstborn children I would still be against it despite that appendage. And really, what's the worst that happens if we don't use our oh so precious canines?
Really, I'm not saying that eating meat is wrong, there's still a large hurdle to overcome for someone to switch to excluding it from their diet, it's just the flawed logic in arguments commonly used for eating meat, and the indifference people have for the fact that animals had to die for their food bothers me.
I don't know what your definition of an "extreme vegetarian" is, but I think the problem is that more often than not, animals are treated quite poorly. When it comes to animal welfare, the american meat industry is a disaster area and there are little to no regulations.scw55 said:Eating meat is never wrong.
How the animals are treated and what animals are processed for meat is the questions
I feel many extreme Vegetarians forget this.
The modern man also doesn't need more than a few square meters of living space yet the average house is much, much larger.s28 said:The modern man does not need to kill/hunt for survival as there is abundance of vegetables and fruits available to eat.
What person convinced you that vegetarians eat only plants? They just don't eat meat. I think you're confusing them with vegans. Anyways, the friend I was referring to only ate fish during the year that she ended up making it to worlds, I should have specified that. Before that she was still a very capable athlete, just not as much as she could have been without the extra protein. Which I did say, not eating meat does make it very difficult to build muscle. Yeah, and I would agree she wasn't a vegetarian at that point, but it's not like she was crippled physically by not eating meat all those years.BNguyen said:Have your friends recently switched over to plants only or have they been that way their entire lives? Besides, your logic went down the hole when you said your friend ate fish. You can't include meat in your diet and call yourself a vegetarian.The Almighty Aardvark said:The problem I'm having with this argument is that it actually isn't necessary to live. Last I checked all of my vegetarian friends are still kicking. A better argument is that it is very difficult to build muscle and fitness without meat, although it's still not impossible. I have a female friend who competed at an international level in climbing, and was a vegetarian (although she did include fish in her diet).
I also don't believe that our biological design should determine our morals. Making a huge stretch here, but if we had some sort of compartment in our body that was designed solely for crushing the heads of our firstborn children I would still be against it despite that appendage. And really, what's the worst that happens if we don't use our oh so precious canines?
Really, I'm not saying that eating meat is wrong, there's still a large hurdle to overcome for someone to switch to excluding it from their diet, it's just the flawed logic in arguments commonly used for eating meat, and the indifference people have for the fact that animals had to die for their food bothers me.
Thing is, we aren't a pack of wolves, like most people have been mentioning on this thread. Most people have been arguing that we're more intelligent than animals, which I'd definitely agree with. Also, I like to pride myself on not having the moral capacity of a pack of wolves. Don't play the "We can eat them because we're better than them" card and then follow it with saying we should follow their rules.And this line: "I also don't believe that our biological design should determine our morals." It's the same as telling a pack of wolves to not eat you because you are made of meat. When it comes to the natural diet of an omnivorous life form, there are no morals, omnivorous life forms eat meat and plants because they need to do so in order to stay healthy.
Believe it or not we need to feed all of those animals that we eat, if mass production of animals was no longer occurring there'd be huge reserves of food not being used. That doesn't really matter though because I am not saying we should halt all meat production and all start munching down on corn. Remember that I said that I still eat meat, and that I wasn't saying that it was wrong to do it. I'd say what I'm trying to do again, but I already said it in the last paragraph of my last response.To switch over to a entire vegetarian lifestyle would have just as much an environmental impact as maintaining the one we have, why? because we need enormous amounts of land to produce enough crops to feed everyone, whereas a single cow can feed numerous families.
And let's say we did switch over to an entire vegetarian diet, eventually, we would evolve to become rather diminished, like a bunch of spider monkeys who could barely use our limbs to outrun our predators, and even if we did keep our guns for defense, what's going to happen to the animals we kill to survive, we just leave them there, and they rot unless eaten by scavengers. Killing an animal for defense and not using it (like feeding other animals that could help defend us - like dogs) is not as bad as killing an animal for food.
I agree with you on this, if I ever became a vegetarian (which I somewhat doubt) this would be the reason. The biggest thing is people just need tone down their meat consumption. And really, there's nothing bad that comes of that, less disease and obesity would definitely be benefits. My hopes are on lab-grown meat reaching a level where it can be switched in with regular meat and no one noticing.TomWiley said:I don't know what your definition of an "extreme vegetarian" is, but I think the problem is that more often than not, animals are treated quite poorly. When it comes to animal welfare, the american meat industry is a disaster area and there are little to no regulations.scw55 said:Eating meat is never wrong.
How the animals are treated and what animals are processed for meat is the questions
I feel many extreme Vegetarians forget this.
This is nearly inevitable because it's impossible to grow more than 9 billion animals each year for slaughtering and also offering these animals decent living conditions. It's not profitable for the meat industry to do that when the demand for meat is so high. And in the western world, we eat a lot of meat. Way more than what was ever natural for our diet, and the meat industry must expand aggressively to supply that demand, which is problematic for animals and the environment.
So I can definitely understand why some people would go vegetarian for political reasons, to lower or compensate for the extreme meat production by simply not consuming any meat at all. Of course another solution would be if we all just started eating less meat and a more varied diet, but that's not likely to happen.
Those damn chickens and their vicious hunting parties! Believe you me, if we weren't eating them they'd be all over us.Death God said:My basic thought is that if some wild animal is willing eat me to live, then I am willing as well. If I died and my family had to eat me to survive, then so be it. Do what you can to live another day... within reason of course.
Hehe, well I see that your name is a tribute to all those small vicious mammals that would devour us in a second if we weren't culling their numbers for food... (Okay, I don't know anyone who eats aardvarks, and chickens are fowls not mammals, but still.)The Almighty Aardvark said:Those damn chickens and their vicious hunting parties! Believe you me, if we weren't eating them they'd be all over us.Death God said:My basic thought is that if some wild animal is willing eat me to live, then I am willing as well. If I died and my family had to eat me to survive, then so be it. Do what you can to live another day... within reason of course.