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Vegan (alt.food.vegan) This newsgroup exists to share ideas and issues of concern among vegans. We are always happy to share our recipes- perhaps especially with omnivores who are simply curious- or even better, accomodating a vegan guest for a meal! |
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· From the life and death of a thousand pound grass raised
steer and whatever he happens to kill during his life, people get over 500 pounds of human consumable meat...that's well over 500 servings of meat. From a grass raised dairy cow people get thousands of dairy servings. Due to the influence of farm machinery, and *icides, and in the case of rice the flooding and draining of fields, one meal of soy or rice based product is likely to involve more animal deaths than hundreds of meals derived from grass raised cattle. Grass raised cattle products contribute to less wildlife deaths, better wildlife habitat, and better lives for cattle than soy or rice products. · |
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![]() "Crank" > wrote in message om... > wrote in message >. .. > > · From the life and death of a thousand pound grass raised > > steer and whatever he happens to kill during his life, people > > get over 500 pounds of human consumable meat...that's well > > over 500 servings of meat. From a grass raised dairy cow people > > get thousands of dairy servings. Due to the influence of farm > > machinery, and *icides, and in the case of rice the flooding and > > draining of fields, one meal of soy or rice based product is > > likely to involve more animal deaths than hundreds of meals > > derived from grass raised cattle. Grass raised cattle products > > contribute to less wildlife deaths, better wildlife habitat, and > > better lives for cattle than soy or rice products. · > > The whole hypocrisy of these types of arguments is this - > > The people posting them regard human life to be far superior and more > valuable than other life forms. Now, here's the tricky part - they > compare quantity over all else, assuming that an ant is equal to a cow > in all other aspects, so therefore it is the sheer number that they > use as a sole arguing point, not stating that perhaps a dozen small > creatures with extremly short natural lifespans might not be on par > with a highly intelligent sentient being that's capable of living a > longer life naturally than many people in third world countries. THAT > is my problem, and they never seem to clear it up. ========================== The problem is that you vegans always seem to want to compare bugs to cows. Why is that? What I alwasy talk about is other mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, and amphibians. Why are the ones you kill and leave to rot of less importance than the ones I kill and eat. That's what you've never been able to answer. Now, if you would prefer to add in the bugs, on top of all the other animals, be my guess. You really come out the killer on that count, fool. > > SIDE NOTE - Hey Ricky - did you come into this post at all and see > what I typed? THAT is what's known as explaining yourself. Take > notes, and use them next time I ask you to tell my why you think what > you do. But, I doubt you'll put forth the effort... =========================== You done nothing of the sort. > > Nobody ever said that being vegan was a casualty-free lifestyle, David ===================== Yes, they have. many have even come here and claimed that they kill no animals just because they eat none... > (or whatever your name is again - I forget.) However, you CANNOT use > a comparison of value in one instance and then neglect to use it in > another for sheer sake of numbers. That's the hole in your logic. > Not to mention that your theory allocates the use of torture to > produce what you consider to be "less cruel." Very silly indeed. > Perhaps I'll start whipping my employees to work harder because it is > all justified - after all, I'm at a higher level than they are, and > they're "free" to do as they wish when they're not producing services > for me for my benefit. > > You've never managed to get this one straight yet. I'm not saying I'm > perfect, but your arguments have too many factual and philosophical > flaws to be valid. ================== Yes, no vegan has ever been able to give a straight rationalization for their lys... |
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![]() "Crank" > wrote in message om... > wrote in message >. .. > > · From the life and death of a thousand pound grass raised > > steer and whatever he happens to kill during his life, people > > get over 500 pounds of human consumable meat...that's well > > over 500 servings of meat. From a grass raised dairy cow people > > get thousands of dairy servings. Due to the influence of farm > > machinery, and *icides, and in the case of rice the flooding and > > draining of fields, one meal of soy or rice based product is > > likely to involve more animal deaths than hundreds of meals > > derived from grass raised cattle. Grass raised cattle products > > contribute to less wildlife deaths, better wildlife habitat, and > > better lives for cattle than soy or rice products. · > > Almost forgot - ===================== What? To reply to the post where I did discuss views? I see you haven't bothered. Cat got your tongue? Or have you finally realized the hypocrisy of your participation on usenet. in addition to the flaws of this argument, it is all > abstract figures that cannot be proven. I think that with a little > searching for...get this...*un*biased research you'll find your facts > aren't quite in line with the truth. Not to mention you're taking > off-kilter "facts" and using them as a standard when such things as > the average number of collateral damage deaths can never really be > proven. A study on 500 square yards does not define all farmed > territory, but again, anti-AR false studies rear their ugly head again > and again. > > CrankyVegan |
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On 28 Apr 2004 15:36:02 -0700, (Crank) wrote:
wrote in message >. .. >> On 27 Apr 2004 23:45:44 -0700, (Crank) wrote: >> >> wrote in message >. .. >> >> · From the life and death of a thousand pound grass raised >> >> steer and whatever he happens to kill during his life, people >> >> get over 500 pounds of human consumable meat...that's well >> >> over 500 servings of meat. From a grass raised dairy cow people >> >> get thousands of dairy servings. Due to the influence of farm >> >> machinery, and *icides, and in the case of rice the flooding and >> >> draining of fields, one meal of soy or rice based product is >> >> likely to involve more animal deaths than hundreds of meals >> >> derived from grass raised cattle. Grass raised cattle products >> >> contribute to less wildlife deaths, better wildlife habitat, and >> >> better lives for cattle than soy or rice products. · >> > >> >Almost forgot - in addition to the flaws of this argument, it is all >> >abstract figures that cannot be proven. I think that with a little >> >searching for...get this...*un*biased research you'll find your facts >> >aren't quite in line with the truth. >> >> No. You would be the one to find that, but even when it's >> pointed out to you, you are unwilling to accept the truth. > >A few random internet citations isn't truth, David. > >> Just >> to begin with it is an absurd idea to think that *no* vegetable >> production involves more animal deaths than *any* meat >> production. > >Nobody said that it was impossible, but you're neglecting to look at >the big picture. You're over-generalizing and using it as the >across-the-board truth, No I'm not, and we both know it. >a big mistake. > >> Then to look at it in just a bit of detail it's easy to >> understand that getting milk by plowing up a field, planting >> it with grain, flooding it, treating it with *icides, draining it again, >> then cutting down the plants, creates and destroys habitats >> several times, thereby killing many of the animals within (that's >> to get rice for rice milk). > >Or, to have dairy and the majority of beef cattle that are usually not >free-range grass-fed, They are not what I'm referring to, and we both know it. >in which we raise crops and various grains to >feed them, laden with pesticieds, going through all the abovementioned >problems plus the biotech issue plus the manure waste/contamination >issue plus soil damage issues from overfeeding from those that are >free range plus slaughterhouse issues and that whole fiasco (which is >a taboo subject for anti-vegan types because not only is the the cruel >end for the animals, but also human-exploitative to keep your meat >prices cheap!) You only address the issues you like, and I can handle >those, but you leave out so much of the entire picture that you're >look like you're living in a fantasy world. Against your utopian >cattle bearing world, even Rick Etter should be slamming you >constantly for how silly it all sounds. > >> On the other hand, to have cattle >> walking around eating grass kills almost no animals, > >But, how do you know this? Maybe I can find a study online, like you, >that says that the average grazing heifer steps on 3 voles and 5 >fieldmice per day, and unintentionally ingests 238 insects, Maybe. Let's see it. >and much >like youself I'll take that goofy abstract, multiply it by another, >and call it absolute truth. > >See why I don't but into your poorly-researched "facts"? More clearly than you do. >> and >> provides decent lives for cattle as well. > >Just like indentured servitude is a noble and honest thing. After >all, if we're putting shelter over the head of something and feeding >it (even though we'll eventually kill it for our needs) then we must >be doing something kind and caring. That's such an absurd view that >it begs to be ridiculed, David. Go ahead then. >> IF you cared about >> human influence on animals, such things would be important >> to you. In fact they would be VERY important to you. > >These things are important to me, but I go about them in a far better >way than believing in fairy-tale existence of a perfect world where >every cow is smiling and thanking us for creating them just to serve >our needs. So do I. I consider the good and the bad. You don't. >I don't think the term "get real" has ever applied much >more than to what you seem to belive. > >> But >> you only care about promoting veg*nism, so you deny the >> truth instead of accepting it and dealing with it from there. > >Oh, yes, YOUR truth - poorly researched, awkward facts and sunshine >daydreams of humans using animals with a clear conscience and animals >loving every minute of it. How silly of me to deny this. > >> >> >Not to mention you're taking >> >off-kilter "facts" and using them as a standard when such things as > >The only one who has displated skewed facts so far in this argument is >you. Logic is enough to put a hole in them, Then please apply that logic and put a hole in them. >and I think the fact that >even the other anti-vegan types here consider them laughable is a >strong indicator that you need to brush up on your details and >theories. > >> >the average number of collateral damage deaths can never really be >> >proven. A study on 500 square yards does not define all farmed >> >territory, but again, anti-AR false studies rear their ugly head again >> >and again. >> > >> >CrankyVegan >> >> And you pull yours down in a hole, cover your eyes and ears, >> and say: no, no, no, No, NO, NOOO! But the truth remains, >> and the animals suffer as a result. > >Can't say much about the inconsistency of your studies and how one >rice field in Japan out of thousands is not the same as a wheat field >in Iowa, or a peanut plantation in Georgia. When you've amassed info >across the board of field-by-field, crop-by-crop details instead of >making overly broad generalizations perhaps I'll take note of what >you've got to say. No. You will never care, because it doesn't support what you want to believe. There is no doubt that some types of meat involve fewer deaths than some types of vegetable products. The fact that you don't point it out yourself shows your lack of caring about animals. The fact that you try to oppose it shows even more about you .....apparently not to you, but to other people who quite obviously care more about human influence on animals than you ever will. That of course is up to you, but so far it's plain to see that some of us who consume meat care *much* more about human influence on animals than you do. >But, you can either accept the challenge or keep >clinging to that last straw and living on that religious-type faith >that Rick Etter keeps accusing vegans of And what is that? >(which apparently has crossed >the board and infected you!) > >Love, >CrankyVegan |
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