Anybody can be offended, especially those who follow the norms to the T. There are people out there who cannot fathom the fact that there are persons who have different successful lifestyles from them.
Or eat fewer foods that are unsustainable for the environment. You keep hammering in this point that somehow I should be eating chicken because broccoli has a higher carbon footprint per calorie (and as I said a few posts back, where are these "Kentucky Fried Broccoli" chains?). Yeah this might mean that meat should be more costly, but certain fish have increased in price because they are becoming too few.Lightknight said:The alternative is to not meet the food demand. An artificially low supply then means exorbitant prices that end up hurting the most vulnerable among us.
Of course not, and neither do you. You can't use evolutionary psychology to justify behaviours, only explain them. How many times do I have to say this?Are you saying that you are the authority on what people "ought" to be?
Again, false dichotomy.I think you ought to start eating bacon every time you think about a leafy salad![]()
No animal of that size can ever evolve to live in conditions as restrictive as they do. If they're so suited to their environment, why does the lack of exercise and cramped conditions cause so much injury and disease? We can pump them full of as many antibiotics and steroids as we want, they're simply not meant to live in that way.Thanks to biological engineering cows have experienced significant engineering. Are you certain that some of the impacts of our tinkering with their biology and our practices haven't led to a micro-evolution of cows that are evolved to live in dense populations?
Because as we all know, humans are the only animals that have instinctual self-preservation and autonomy.Personification is cute and all but it isn't always right.
There's no "staples of the vegetarian community". A vegetarian diet literally excludes one food group, that's all there is to it.The point is that chicken and pork compare equally and sometimes better than staples of the vegetarian community.
Why are you asking me? There's a food group that is a heavy burden on the environment when there's such high demand, all I think is that less of it should be consumed.What should be our target threshold for carbon footprint per calorie and why?
Why is my diet relevant? You're making assumptions about my diet and that of others that don't eat meat. The fact is, you can't make those assumptions because everyone is different. When I said "I don't really eat leafy salads" that was to counter your assertion, nothing more.Ok, so tell me what you eat. On average.
You're right, it isn't. People in the USA consume an additional 40-50% meat per individual. http://chartsbin.com/view/127302. The study is for the UK but the blogger is applying them to the US which isn't the same demographic.
But this isn't a veggie vs. meat eater debate. It's curious how you persistently try to make this personal, you inquire about my diet and make assumptions about vegetarian/vegan diets. Which is irrelevant. The fact that the amount of fruit and veg that is wasted has to be taken into account to reduce the difference relates to my "supply and demand" point from earlier. The fact that less meat is wasted yet still causes more CO2 emissions per calorie than most other foods does not support your argument very well.5. The study failed to account for waste emissions which are much higher in veggies and fruit. This is HUGE and the study acknowledges that this could have significantly reduced the difference between categories and even linked to a 2013 study that indicated veggies would be much higher waste emitters.
Yeah and I recognise that as a weakness. But, let's not forget this, the argument you're making hinges on "a kilo of broccoli causes more CO2 emissions than a kilo of chicken".Please note that the study itself has one other major issue that I would mark it down on. The sample size is not random. They recruited mostly through vegetarian sites to get all of the samples.
Are you asking me if I believe that vegetarian sites are a good place to find... vegetarians?Do you believe that people who frequent vegetarian sites are a valid cross-section of the overall population of the UK?
I really don't think the ratio of Republicans to Democrats is anywhere near the ratio of meat eaters to vegetarians. You're talking about a minority group in comparison to a majority group.This would be like a polling center going to republican sites and asking them to recruit democrat family members to respond to the study.
Yeah, the study that led to a bunch of clickbait "those pesky vegetarians aren't as great as they think they are" news articles. Which all made the same mistake you're making.The study released this year that found lettuce to be three times the emissions of bacon is a newly released study and pertains directly to the US.
You're forgetting about methane here. Also "local environmental pollution" doesn't happen in a closed system. Water sources can spread over continents.The study is talking about local environmental pollution. Not emissions. You and I can agree all day long that CAFOs take a massive dump on their immediate area. Like, literally where fertilizer and animal waste are concerned.
Many aspects of this are highly debatable. You're assuming:Also, a CAFO is required to have permits regarding disposal and use of the manure. We do limit what they can do and if they go over then that's a failure to regulate.
I think that this handily demonstrates that the answer to the OP is unequivocally 'yes, meat easters can be easy to offend'. Certainly not all meat eaters, or even many, but some.sheppie said:Maybe not the premise, but the smugness and offensiveness of vegans is just... so overwhelming.Silvanus said:Well, you're rather changing the question there. You've assumed the vegetarian in question has been going around reminding meat eaters of stuff, or criticising their choices. Neither of those were part of the premise.
Personally I think a reduction in consumption is what should ideally be aimed at, not a complete end to the meat industry. For the foreseeable future, some sort of industry needs to exist. Even if humans stopped eating meat (as unlikely as that is), we keep pets that rely very heavily on meat. PETA's stance on this is particularly awful, they firmly believe that animals that literally cannot survive without meat should be put on vegan diets just because supplements exist.Totenkreuz said:I'm sorry if I'm coming out a tad random but this topic, and many others, just doesn't spark anything but confusion from me. In the end, why are we talking as if there is only one answer to this, either you go "meat" or you go "no meat" why this ultimate answer mentallity?
That's a really good point. I think expecting everyone to become vegan is pretty delusional (especially when certain indigenous groups literally cannot survive without meat) and trying to pressure people into doing so is a pretty bad idea. It's not the magic solution, no matter how much PETA wants to claim it is. What people should actually be advocating is moderation.votemarvel said:I've had pretty good discussions in the past with vegans over what they think is going to happen once everyone becomes vegan.
A lot of vegans don't seem to have given a thought to what becomes to the animals afterward. Do they think the farmers are going to live in peace and harmony with those animals, or is it more likely that they'll all be slaughtered and the land turned over to farming crops for human consumption. What becomes of the rare breeds that are pretty much only kept around because people want to eat them.
Why are you singling out meat? Plants should be more expensive too under your regime according to their emission.Dizchu said:Or eat fewer foods that are unsustainable for the environment. You keep hammering in this point that somehow I should be eating chicken because broccoli has a higher carbon footprint per calorie (and as I said a few posts back, where are these "Kentucky Fried Broccoli" chains?). Yeah this might mean that meat should be more costly, but certain fish have increased in price because they are becoming too few.Lightknight said:The alternative is to not meet the food demand. An artificially low supply then means exorbitant prices that end up hurting the most vulnerable among us.
That depends, if you're talking about telling people to eat less and I'm telling you that we naturally want a layer of fat to protect from scarce times then we are talking about demanding people do things they don't want to do.Of course not, and neither do you. You can't use evolutionary psychology to justify behaviours, only explain them. How many times do I have to say this?
Not really, the inherent understanding is that if you were going to reach for a leafy salad that a person who eats bacon instead would be doing three times better than you. I'm comparing a very popular vegetarian food item with a very popular omnivore food item. The comparison is valid though I also understand that you could eat something like brussel sprouts or nuts instead of either and come in lower.Again, false dichotomy.
This fact brought to us from thin air? You are making assumptions here. Humans born in these conditions adapt to them and we aren't even evolved for large herd groups.No animal of that size can ever evolve to live in conditions as restrictive as they do.
And yet the way they're living has drastically reduced emissions. Which do you place a higher premium on, free range cows or the environment? Because at the moment it's mathematically impossible for you to have both. We're more likely to come up with various strains of bacteria that consume waste and break down emissions than we are to have free range cows suddenly start producing enough calories per level of emission to compete with large farms. Imagine you are the supreme ruler of how cows are produced but cannot prevent them from being produced. Do you help the environment by leaving industry in place or do you help cows living conditions by requiring free range only?If they're so suited to their environment, why does the lack of exercise and cramped conditions cause so much injury and disease? We can pump them full of as many antibiotics and steroids as we want, they're simply not meant to live in that way.
I'm unsure what your point is. Cows are already naturally large herd animals (as compared to humans which are small core family herd animals) and have been frequently kept in close proximity for all of humans' cultivation history of them. Same with buffalos who were at one point so numerous that they packed themselves into similar density rates naturally. So the close proximity may not be causing them any anxiety at all and we are just projecting that on them. The work of Temple Grandin did tremendous good in reducing stress being imposed on the cows and the industry really responded to it and benefitted from making the animals more at home. Yes, they are packed closely together but they are significantly less stressed now than they were back in the 70s. Things have only gotten better. More than half of the beef facilities in the US follow her designs.Because as we all know, humans are the only animals that have instinctual self-preservation and autonomy.Personification is cute and all but it isn't always right.
Every demographic has staples. Staples are merely the most common foods of any demographic. While I do understand that ignorant people asking if you get tired of eating salads all the time is reaching to point of asking black people about fried chicken in offense to the individual, the numbers bear out a significantly higher consumption of lettuce and several of the highest emitters.There's no "staples of the vegetarian community". A vegetarian diet literally excludes one food group, that's all there is to it.
Heavy how and by what definition? What is heavy and what is light? We've established that lettuce is three times that of bacon? But is either of those high? Is emitting twice what a tomato emits per calorie bad or are these both not really that bad individually? Just because people eat a lot of beef so the total footprint of the industry is large doesn't mean that swapping it out with something else would be better. Like we already stated, just moving over to a less meat model appears to make things worse in energy consumption, water usage, and overall emissions.Why are you asking me? There's a food group that is a heavy burden on the environment when there's such high demand, all I think is that less of it should be consumed.
It's not just down to raw numbers, our emissions per calorie are lower too. Remember, the UK has to import a hell of a lot of food and that's an instant jump in their food emissions since transportation is a major emitter. Me, I can go to my neighbor and by beef and cheese. I can go to my other neighbor and get chicken, eggs and veggies. I can literally watch my plant and animal food grow year round if I want to purchase from them and cut out transportation, pesticides (if they use pesticides, it's usually a jalapeno, garlic, onion blend because they have an organic rating). As far as I'm concerned my own personal carbon emission would require it's own separate emissions testing. But my main point is that we have these farms all over the country and major retailers like Walmart *shudder* are beginning to source local foods in a way that has to have a tremendous impact on transportation emissions.You're right, it isn't. People in the USA consume an additional 40-50% meat per individual. http://chartsbin.com/view/127302. The study is for the UK but the blogger is applying them to the US which isn't the same demographic.
You literally presented this study as a counter to my comments on how much worse veggies are than we thought. I'm showing that they missed HUGE emissions that are much higher in veggies and they even acknowledged it. That's not even addressing that the emissions were calculated by weight and not calorie which is an even bigger mistake. With all that in mind, the study just released may be exactly in line when waste and emission per calorie is concerned. Then again, the data is old in the one you linked so who knows what has changed.But this isn't a veggie vs. meat eater debate. It's curious how you persistently try to make this personal, you inquire about my diet and make assumptions about vegetarian/vegan diets. Which is irrelevant. The fact that the amount of fruit and veg that is wasted has to be taken into account to reduce the difference relates to my "supply and demand" point from earlier. The fact that less meat is wasted yet still causes more CO2 emissions per calorie than most other foods does not support your argument very well.5. The study failed to account for waste emissions which are much higher in veggies and fruit. This is HUGE and the study acknowledges that this could have significantly reduced the difference between categories and even linked to a 2013 study that indicated veggies would be much higher waste emitters.
No, my argument is that emissions per calories between many popular veggies and fruits are similar or higher than several types of meat and also not that far from the emissions per calorie of beef albeit still lower.Yeah and I recognise that as a weakness. But, let's not forget this, the argument you're making hinges on "a kilo of broccoli causes more CO2 emissions than a kilo of chicken".
No, I'm asking if vegetarians who care enough to frequent a vegetarian centered site are going to be representative of the overall population of vegetarians or will they likely express even healthier lifestyles like the study acknowledges in their own criticisms?Are you asking me if I believe that vegetarian sites are a good place to find... vegetarians?Do you believe that people who frequent vegetarian sites are a valid cross-section of the overall population of the UK?
No, studies have recently figured out that emission to calories is the correct quantifier which already put plants in a less superior emission place. The 2015 study saw greater emissions in lettuce and fewer emissions in pork. However, do remember that pork was already low on the list of emitters to begin with so them saying "bacon" isn't really that novel. The three times higher emissions is, but bacon being unhealthy does not mean it is automatically going to emit more. I'm sure the study still has beef above lettuce though.Yeah, the study that led to a bunch of clickbait "those pesky vegetarians aren't as great as they think they are" news articles. Which all made the same mistake you're making.The study released this year that found lettuce to be three times the emissions of bacon is a newly released study and pertains directly to the US.
A sliver of lettuce isn't really in the same ballpark as a bowl of it. The study did show vegetarians as having eaten nearly 50% more lettuce than beef eaters but I'm not certain if they tracked a sliver of lettuce on a burger or not. I personally do not enjoy lettuce on burgers for what its worth. The heat of the burger screws with the texture of the lettuce in an unpleasant way. I do like tomato though. But vegetarians do eat 27% more tomatoes too.Lettuce and broccoli aren't substitutions for meat in a diet that lacks meat. I mean, generally there's lettuce in beef burgers am I right? What I'd like to see is how much of that lettuce is produced for salads and how much of it is produced for Big Macs.
Methane is included in the other emission studies. Seeing as fertilizer is a tremendous contributor to local environmental pollution then I hope you can see why this isn't a problem that is mutually exclusive to meat.You're forgetting about methane here. Also "local environmental pollution" doesn't happen in a closed system. Water sources can spread over continents.
If 1 is not true, then that shit needs to get taken care of. You can I could picket arm in arm on that crap (teehee, manure puns).Many aspects of this are highly debatable. You're assuming:
1) The regulations are adhered to
2) The regulations themselves are of a sufficient standard
Let's not ignore how many corners get cut by industries to maximize profit.
Pretty ironic since Hitler was a veggie.chocolate pickles said:Not at all. Vegetarians and vegans are a nightmare though - they look at you like some kind of hitler for liking meat. It's not my fault I'm a logical human being.
Just had to respond to this...No, my argument is that emissions per calories between many popular veggies and fruits are similar or higher than several types of meat and also not that far from the emissions per calorie of beef albeit still lower.
"Emissions per kilo" is something I've been systematically disputing because we eat by calories, not weight. If we take away a kg of meat we have to replace the calorie loss with significantly more kgs of whatever else due to the calorie efficiency of meat. So it has been dishonest of researchers to use weight in the past.
And we see how well THAT turned out.Dizchu said:Pretty ironic since Hitler was a veggie.chocolate pickles said:Not at all. Vegetarians and vegans are a nightmare though - they look at you like some kind of hitler for liking meat. It's not my fault I'm a logical human being.![]()
Maybe they should be? Maybe they should come in smaller portions? Personally I think smaller portions of fruit and veg would be great instead of encouraging bulk purchases, because fresh fruit and veg just don't last that long.Lightknight said:Why are you singling out meat? Plants should be more expensive too under your regime according to their emission.
Personally all I do is refrain from eating meat and make sure that the amount of food I buy is minimal. I'm the kind of person that'd buy 6 bread rolls for ?0.80 instead of 12 for ?0.99, if 6 is all I need. In addition to reduced consumption, I think consumer practices like this should be advocated. A bit of a tangential point, but I think supermarkets should stop encouraging buying fresh foods in bulk.Do you personally have a chart at home of emissions by food type or are you just eating things you want according to food group and nutrition?
It's called compromising and everyone has to do it in some form or another. Due to the excesses of globalisation and production, we make fewer and fewer compromises. There are ways to incentivise this, in my country we've charged customers for plastic carrier bags to encourage re-using old bags. It was annoying at first but we've grown accustomed to it (not sure if England has reached that stage yet though). At some point we have to realise that certain things we take for granted at present are unsustainable.That depends, if you're talking about telling people to eat less and I'm telling you that we naturally want a layer of fat to protect from scarce times then we are talking about demanding people do things they don't want to do.
Humans aren't born into those conditions unless they are severely impoverished, and their low quality of life certainly doesn't indicate that they "adapted" to them.This fact brought to us from thin air? You are making assumptions here. Humans born in these conditions adapt to them and we aren't even evolved for large herd groups.
Sure, but if they eat 40-50% more meat than us, they also consume 40-50% more calories. Now maybe the "lower emissions" from the US compensates for that, that's certainly possible.It's not just down to raw numbers, our emissions per calorie are lower too.
Just to make this clear, my angle is about the rate of consumption of meat. While comparing veggies to omnivores is useful (because we're comparing standard rate of consumption to zero consumption), not all meat eaters eat the same amount of meat or the same kinds of meat. The chart you provided indicates that most meats trend towards the top of the "emissions per calorie" scale with a few vegetables being outliers.You literally presented this study as a counter to my comments on how much worse veggies are than we thought.
My apologies, I made a mistake. What I meant to say that nobody eats an equivalent amount of lettuce or broccoli in calories to a steak. Even in salads, ingredients other than lettuce tend to provide the most calories. Though it's still true that people don't eat things like broccoli or lettuce by the bucketload, and for there to be a calorific equilibrium.No, my argument is that emissions per calories between many popular veggies and fruits are similar or higher than several types of meat and also not that far from the emissions per calorie of beef albeit still lower.
To be fair, vegetarians are likely to consult vegetarian communities for advice on their diets and recommendations of places to eat, seeing as many popular chains have limited "vegetarian" options.No, I'm asking if vegetarians who care enough to frequent a vegetarian centered site are going to be representative of the overall population of vegetarians or will they likely express even healthier lifestyles like the study acknowledges in their own criticisms?
Not at all, I just find any clickbait to be tiring. Certainly the study has value, but when all these smug news articles get publishes about how "those silly vegetarians are such hypocrites" based on a very selective interpretation of the data, it's depressing.I'm sorry if the study's findings have led people to levy insults at you. That doesn't make the findings untrue though.
Sure, but it's not an emission that is limited to the local environment. As for the excessive production of fertilizer, yes that is not exclusive to meat. But a less intensive operation could produce fertilizer that can be absorbed by the environment and grow crops, instead of producing gigantic, unusable piles of manure.Methane is included in the other emission studies. Seeing as fertilizer is a tremendous contributor to local environmental pollution then I hope you can see why this isn't a problem that is mutually exclusive to meat.
That is... that is actually something I can agree about. If you want change, change it little by little as it's so much more easy to cope with and I, myself, could even agree with changing my own food habit that way. Good work!Dizchu said:Personally I think a reduction in consumption is what should ideally be aimed at, not a complete end to the meat industry. For the foreseeable future, some sort of industry needs to exist. Even if humans stopped eating meat (as unlikely as that is), we keep pets that rely very heavily on meat. PETA's stance on this is particularly awful, they firmly believe that animals that literally cannot survive without meat should be put on vegan diets just because supplements exist.Totenkreuz said:I'm sorry if I'm coming out a tad random but this topic, and many others, just doesn't spark anything but confusion from me. In the end, why are we talking as if there is only one answer to this, either you go "meat" or you go "no meat" why this ultimate answer mentallity?
It is pretty frustrating how so many people think it's a black-and-white issue, we can only have one extreme or the other.
Ever get the feeling that people that like well done steaks just have never had a good cut of beef before?SuperScrub said:Say you like your steaks well-done and you'll have the answer to your question.