Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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! |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian,alt.food.vegan,talk.politics.animals,uk.environment.conservation,uk.rec.gardening
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5/14/2010 3:43 PM, Rupert wrote:
> On May 15, 8:23 am, "Fred C. > > wrote: >> On 5/14/2010 3:14 PM, Rupert wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >>> On May 15, 6:26 am, "Fred C. > >>> wrote: >>>> On 5/14/2010 1:16 PM, Rupert wrote: >> >>>>> On May 15, 6:15 am, "Fred C. > >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> On 5/14/2010 1:06 PM, Rupert wrote: >> >>>>>>> On May 15, 5:40 am, "Fred C. > >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>> The "vegan" pseudo-argument on "inefficiency" is that >>>>>>>> the resources used to produce a given amount of meat >>>>>>>> could produce a much greater amount of vegetable food >>>>>>>> for direct human consumption, due to the loss of energy >>>>>>>> that results from feeding grain and other feeds to >>>>>>>> livestock. >> >>>>>>>> In order to examine the efficiency of some process, >>>>>>>> there must be agreement on what the end product is >>>>>>>> whose efficiency of production you are examining. If >>>>>>>> you're looking at the production of consumer >>>>>>>> electronics, for example, then the output is >>>>>>>> televisions, stereo receivers, DVD players, etc. >>>>>>>> Rather obviously, you need to get specific. No >>>>>>>> sensible person is going to suggest that we ought to >>>>>>>> discontinue the production of television sets, because >>>>>>>> they require more resources to produce (which they do), >>>>>>>> and produce more DVD players instead. (For the >>>>>>>> cave-dwellers, an extremely high quality DVD player may >>>>>>>> be bought for under US$100, while a comparable quality >>>>>>>> television set is going to cost several hundred >>>>>>>> dollars. $500 for a DVD player is astronomical - I'm >>>>>>>> not even sure there are any that expensive - while you >>>>>>>> can easily pay $3000 or more for a large plasma TV >>>>>>>> monitor, which will require a separate TV receiver.) >> >>>>>>>> What are the "vegans" doing with their misuse of >>>>>>>> "inefficiency"? They're clearly saying that the end >>>>>>>> product whose efficiency of production we want to >>>>>>>> consider is "food", i.e., undifferentiated food >>>>>>>> calories. Just as clearly, they are wrong. Humans >>>>>>>> don't consider all foods equal, and hence equally >>>>>>>> substitutable. As in debunking so much of "veganism", >>>>>>>> we can see this easily - laughably easily - by >>>>>>>> restricting our view to a strictly vegetarian diet, >>>>>>>> without introducing meat into the discussion at all. >>>>>>>> If "vegans" REALLY were interested in food production >>>>>>>> efficiency, they would be advocating the production of >>>>>>>> only a very small number of vegetable crops, as it is >>>>>>>> obvious that some crops are more efficient to produce - >>>>>>>> use less resources per nutritional unit of output - >>>>>>>> than others. >> >>>>>>>> But how do "vegans" actually behave? Why, they buy >>>>>>>> some fruits and vegetables that are resource-efficient, >>>>>>>> and they buy some fruits and vegetables that are >>>>>>>> relatively resource-INefficient. You know this by >>>>>>>> looking at retail prices: higher priced goods ARE >>>>>>>> higher priced because they use more resources to >>>>>>>> produce. If "vegans" REALLY were interested in food >>>>>>>> production efficiency, they would only be buying the >>>>>>>> absolutely cheapest fruit or vegetable for any given >>>>>>>> nutritional requirement. This would necessarily mean >>>>>>>> there would be ONLY one kind of leafy green vegetable, >>>>>>>> one kind of grain, one variety of fruit, and so on. >> >>>>>>>> If "vegans" were to extend this misuse of "efficiency" >>>>>>>> into other consumer goods, say clothing, then there >>>>>>>> would be only one kind of shoe produced (and thus only >>>>>>>> one brand). The same would hold for every conceivable >>>>>>>> garment. A button-front shirt with collars costs more >>>>>>>> to produce - uses more resources - than does a T-shirt, >>>>>>>> so everyone "ought" to wear only T-shirts, if we're >>>>>>>> going to focus on the efficiency of shirt production. >>>>>>>> You don't "need" any button front shirts, just as you >>>>>>>> don't "need" meat. But look in any "vegan's" wardrobe, >>>>>>>> and you'll see a variety of different kinds of clothing >>>>>>>> (all natural fiber, of course.) "vegans" aren't >>>>>>>> advocating that only the most "efficient" clothing be >>>>>>>> produced, as their own behavior clearly indicates. >> >>>>>>>> The correct way to analyze efficiency of production is >>>>>>>> to focus as narrowly as possible on the end product, >>>>>>>> then see if that product can be produced using fewer >>>>>>>> resources. It is important to note that the consumer's >>>>>>>> view of products as distinct things is crucial. A >>>>>>>> radio can be produced far more "efficiently", in terms >>>>>>>> of resource use, than a television; but consumers don't >>>>>>>> view radios and televisions as generic entertainment >>>>>>>> devices. >> >>>>>>>> The critical mistake, the UNBELIEVABLY stupid mistake, >>>>>>>> that "vegans" who misconceive of "inefficiency" are >>>>>>>> making, is to see "food" as some undifferentiated lump >>>>>>>> of calories and other nutritional requirements. Once >>>>>>>> one realizes that this is not how ANYONE, including the >>>>>>>> "vegans" themselves, views food, then the >>>>>>>> "inefficiency" argument against using resources for >>>>>>>> meat production falls to the ground. >> >>>>>>>> I hope this helps. >> >>>>>>> What the efficiency argument actually says, on any reasonably >>>>>>> intelligent reading, is that by going vegan you can have a diet which >>>>>>> is just as tasty and nutritious with a much smaller environmental >>>>>>> footprint. >> >>>>>> That's not what it's saying at all, as we already know. >> >>>>> How do you know? >> >>>> I already explained it to you several times over the last couple of >>>> years. The issue is *not* about environmental footprint, and you know >>>> it. It's about a misconceived and ignorant belief regarding resource >>>> allocation. >> >>> The issue is not about environmental footprint *for whom*? >> >> The issue is not about environmental footprint at all. >> > > An argument can be made for going vegan based on environmental > footprint, right? No, because you don't make the same commitment to minimize your footprint in all other aspects of your life, *and* because that's not why you're "going vegan", *and* because you'd "go vegan" *EVEN IF* it had a higher environmental footprint than omnivory. >>> Do you claim that *no-one* who talks about the "inefficiency" of meat >>> production has this environmental argument in mind? That seems like a >>> pretty extraordinary claim to me. >> >> I mean that everyone who has blabbered about it here is not talking >> about the environment. > > Thank you. It is helpful when you clarify for me whom you wish to > address, obviously. > > Who has talked about it here? Your good pal, Lesley R. Simon, the foot-rubbing whore of Aughalustia, Ballaghaderreen, County Roscommon, Ireland. Many others whose names escape me. One was a ****wit named 'sam', 03 Mar 2008. Another ****wit named 'pinboard' on the same date. It is the standard position in aaev. >> They're *all* talking about some kind of >> nonsensical absolute inefficiency. The overwhelming majority have also >> repeatedly maintained that the land currently in use for livestock >> fodder continue to be used for agriculture, but that it be used to grow >> food for "starving people" around the world. > > You wouldn't be able to use all the land for that purpose. Irrelevant. >> *Clearly*, that means >> those people, at least, are not advancing an environmental argument. >> > > It doesn't really mean that, It does mean that. -- Any more lip out of you and I'll haul off and let you have it...if you know what's good for you, you won't monkey around with Fred C. Dobbs |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
The myth of food production "efficiency" in the "ar" debate | Vegan | |||
"Fried food heart risk 'a myth' (as long as you use olive oil or sunflower oil)" | General Cooking | |||
The myth of food production "efficiency" in the "ar" debate | Vegan | |||
+ Asian Food Experts: Source for "Silver Needle" or "Rat Tail" Noodles? + | General Cooking | |||
The myth of food production "efficiency" in the "ar" debate | Vegan |