Thorntangle said:No, he's not.
He's not? I gathered that he was, based on the following...
Originally posted by Piratecat
I'm afraid that eating vegan is a lot more work than I ever dreamed it would be.

Thorntangle said:No, he's not.
Originally posted by Piratecat
I'm afraid that eating vegan is a lot more work than I ever dreamed it would be.
Thorntangle said:
I might start eating meat again after we start to vat grow it and engineer out the unhealthy stuff. I can see vat grown meat coming relatively soon, but vat grown meat engineered to be healthy is a little further out.
eXodus said:well here is my snap culinary critique of the dish. and also what i would do to change it...
honestly, i am a culinary snob. simple as that.
No slam intended, just something to take into consideration. Their efficiency in using every part of the animal would put native american bison hunters to shame.PowerWordDumb said:Rather than seeing that as a slam against the "meat industry" as it appears you intend, I'd view that instead as the ultimate in business acumen.
I don't understand this part, but it seems that you are saying that harvesting every available molecule from an animal came about as a result of people being vegetarians or maybe that meat producers are trying to trick vegetarians into eating their products because some of them are smug?A certain segment of the market swears off your original products, so you simply change the format, and they will beat a path to your door to buy them while continuing to feel content with what they think they're avoiding. The fact that some of the more vocal of them are also quite smug about the whole thing just seals the deal.
Personally, I applaud them.
Thorntangle said:
No slam intended, just something to take into consideration. Their efficiency in using every part of the animal would put native american bison hunters to shame.
Thorntangle said:I don't understand this part, but it seems that you are saying that harvesting every available molecule from an animal came about as a result of people being vegetarians or maybe that meat producers are trying to trick vegetarians into eating their products because some of them are smug?
Thorntangle said:
You've hit the nail on the head as to why I don't eat that stuff anymore. That industry is just nasty, brutish work for all involved. It's bad for the animals, bad for the people who don't get paid jack to work all day on dangerous production lines, and it's bad for the people that eat it.
I might start eating meat again after we start to vat grow it and engineer out the unhealthy stuff. I can see vat grown meat coming relatively soon, but vat grown meat engineered to be healthy is a little further out.
Since you askedeXodus said:have you looked into the organic and free range animal proteins? it is not the chicago meat industry of the 1920's nor is it the extremist propoganda of peta and their ilk.
Thorntangle said:
Since you asked, it's a problem of scale and resources. Family farms and organic farms are unlikely ever to meet the demand of our population. And regardless, with the same amount of food and water required to bring a cow to slaughtering size, you could feed thousands of people instead of tens or hundreds. It is a terribly inefficient way to produce calories and protein.
And per Dinkeldog's request, let's leave PETA out of this.