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11-12-2011, 09:23 AM | #952 (permalink) |
Juicious Maximus III
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I'm not sure you understand me correctly. Your most recent ancestors (who are most like you biologically) were omnivores who included meat in their diets and were adapted to that. Accepting that, how can you say we are not supposed to eat meat? If anything, you are supposed to eat meat. Being a healthy vegetarian takes a lot more effort than being a healthy meat eater.
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11-12-2011, 09:24 AM | #953 (permalink) | |
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11-12-2011, 09:58 AM | #954 (permalink) | |
Juicious Maximus III
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I feel I should point out that I'm not against vegetarianism. I'm against erronous claims. I think a vegetarian has to base a decision to be a vegetarian on something which is not false. I can see why one could wish to believe that humans are herbivores who just recently in modern times picked up meat, but that severly diminishes the extreme importance eating meat has had on human evolution and development. Vegetarians should acknowledge that and find something else to base their diet choice on, such as thinking meat tastes bad, because of vegetarianism being more sustainable or a refusal to support a meat industry which they have something against personally. When it comes to animal suffering, I don't really believe we have a moral obligation to animals not to cause them to suffer any more than a lion or a shark does towards their prey. I don't believe in a God or universe that judges our actions. Any moral obligation we have in regards to animal suffering is to ourselves and eachother. We're morally judged by ourselves and the people we live with. We have a capacity to empathize with animals and when their suffering makes us or others feel bad, we may be doing something morally wrong. The way we treat animals can be a reflection on ourselves and someone finding enjoyment in torturing a cat probably has a lot of issues and you may want to stay away from that person for good reason. But when I'm out fishing a dinner and catch something, I don't feel a moral obligation towards the fish or anything else that tells me it's wrong to kill it and eat it. I would feel obliged to reduce it's suffering because causing suffering makes me feel bad. If someone cried and begged me not to kill the fish, I would also feel a moral obligation towards that person.
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Something Completely Different Last edited by Guybrush; 11-12-2011 at 10:08 AM. |
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11-14-2011, 12:16 AM | #955 (permalink) | |||||
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Location: Where people kill 30 million pigs per year
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I like your new version of the title of the book upon which the movie "Blade Runner" was based. I wonder if the novel's setting was intentional, as the reference to Saint Francis does bring up the issue of compassion toward sentient beings, since he was reputed to care greatly about animals and consider them worth "saving" in a spiritual sense. Probably the symbolism of San Francisco's name wasn't lost on the author. Quote:
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No meat-eaters I've met have ever appeared to show a pang of conscience due to emotional pain I have felt as they cause my distant relatives to suffer or partake in eating those animals' bodies. In fact, the opposite sometimes appears true: the more emotionally perturbed I am by what they do, the more callous they become. My bursting into tears when a relative brought home a pheasant he shot didn't end his pursuit of hunting as a pleasure sport. Killing animals is great fun, after all. My bursting into tears at a restaurant after relatives ordered lobsters, who I knew were boiled alive before they were brought dead to the table, didn't affect the people at all. My shouting, "Please stop! You're scaring her!" as relatives manhandled a frightened, bleating baby goat (a new playtoy for a 4-year-old boy to practice roping on) had no effect. The impression I get is that most people care about neither the animals nor about any person's emotional pain over how mercilessly the people treat them.
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Last edited by VEGANGELICA; 11-14-2011 at 10:14 PM. |
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11-14-2011, 01:22 PM | #956 (permalink) | ||
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"Lullabies for adults / crossed by the years / carry the flower of disappointment / tattooed in their gloomy melodies."
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11-14-2011, 01:33 PM | #957 (permalink) |
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I don't mean to break your balls Tore but you are seriously taking your ethical obligation way too far here. No meat-eater needs to apologize for the harm they're doing to the animal kingdom. Meat is a necessary component for survival. (And please, Erica, don't spout first-world sympathy to me, I've heard it all before. Yours is an irrational form of moral outrage.)
I tried being a vegetarian. It hurt. Literally. I'm already mildly lactose intolerant so it was really difficult for me to ingest enough cholesterol to have sex. I lost the willpower to chase women, ended up losing something like 20 lbs off a 180 lb frame, masturbation became a chore and I looked generally fucking terrible. I pooped like 4x daily and it wreaked havoc on my GI tract (probably from eating too much fiber and too little water...hey, I like to drink). After a while I realized having an environmental conscience is not nearly as important as a health conscience.
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11-20-2011, 01:11 PM | #958 (permalink) | |||||||
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(1) Well-planned vegan diets, which lack any dietary cholesterol, are known to be healthful: Vegetarian Diets It is possible, of course, that your particular physiology prevented you from thriving even on a well-planned vegan diet...although I'm not sure what the reason for that might be. (2) Humans are generally able to biosynthesize all the cholesterol their bodies need, and dietary sources of cholesterol have much less impact on blood cholesterol levels than people once thought: Quote:
For example, here is a study on testosterone levels in vegans and omnivores that found that vegan men actually had higher testosterone levels and nearly the same levels of free testosterone as omnivores: Quote:
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For example, perhaps you weren't eating sufficient levels of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats such as from nuts. Your rapid weight loss is a red flag that your diet may not have been adequate. You might also be someone with hypocholesterolemia whose body has very low cholesterol levels (such as less than 50 mg/dL) due to a disease or an inherited problem in your cholesterol biosynthesis pathway: Hypocholesterolemia. [Curr Vasc Pharmacol. 2011] - PubMed - NCBI If I were your doctor (and if I *were* a doctor ), I would have: (1) referred you to a nutritionist to ensure your diet was providing you with all the nutrients you needed; (2) drawn your blood to obtain your fasting blood levels of cholesterol (total, HDL, and LDL); (3) measured your total testosterone and free testosterone levels. I agree that your health is most important, yet your description of what happened does not convince me that a nearly vegan diet was the cause of the problem, especially since I've not heard of vegan men in general having disappointing sex lives or sex drives. I'm curious now what your doctor found out about you during your experience with vegetarianism. Do you have records of your cholesterol levels before and during your vegetarian phase, for example? As a vegan, the lowest my Total Cholesterol has been is 110 mg/dL and the highest is 127 mg/dL. I've been biosynthisizing all my own cholesterol for 14 years now...and I also produced all the cholesterol in a 9 lb 10 oz baby! Quote:
Can you think of any situation in which meat-eaters *should* apologize for the harm they're doing to the animal kingdom? Will you eat any animal without any twinge of conscience? A dolphin? A dog? Finally, about my sympathy for animals and my moral outrage: what determines whether an emotional response is "irrational" or not? Aren't emotions distinct from reasoning and thus can't be determined to be "rational" or "irrational?" I would say that a person's emotional response might be "unusual" yet not "irrational." Most people don't feel sad like I do when I see someone eating a chicken or part of a pig. I acknowledge that. Yet rather than viewing my response as irrational, I view *their* response as callous and oddly emotionally empty...and all too normal. From my vantage point as a vegan, it is as if part of their emotional center is dead and they seem emotionally blind when it comes to animals. I recall how I felt when I was emotionally "blind" to food animals. Thinking about their feelings and experiences just wasn't something I did very often. It was as if their experiences didn't exist. In my view, ignoring other beings' existence, and one's impact on these animals, doesn't seem very rational.
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Last edited by VEGANGELICA; 11-20-2011 at 01:31 PM. Reason: This was my 1500th post! And what a post! Woo-hoo! :) |
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11-20-2011, 02:15 PM | #959 (permalink) | |
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My response was anecdotal in its expression, not argumentative. I still think that veganism is an ethically self-indulgent and unnecessary ascetic practice (your response definitely highlighted that admission for sure), and that's probably not going to change any time soon. I don't consult studies when I feel like shit. I just do something about feeling like shit. Being a vegetarian might work for some, it definitely doesn't for me.
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11-20-2011, 03:06 PM | #960 (permalink) | ||
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