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meat is murder

Is killing animals for food ever justifiable?


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The opinion of your doctors has little bearing here. And yes, it is only opinion. Scholarly articles have already been posted in this thread, and I could doubtless find a hundred more, that disagree with it. And please don't assume I haven't already spoke to professionals - I studied Nutrition for a year at college and competed as a county-level athlete for many years. The knowledge I gathered during that time contrasts with yours so unless you can bring me something more than 'but my doctor said!' I'll waste no more time on it as we both know it was the weakest part of your argument.

And yes, the source I posted earlier did account for digestibility but even with those amendments removed (I'm not sure why you would do that though, unless you're not planning on digesting your food...?) the results are much the same. Take a look at this article from the Journal of Sports Science and Medicine. On Page 3 are the unadjusted results which show the overall biological value of a few protein sources.

Whey Protein: 104
Egg: 100
Milk: 91
Beef: 80
Casein: 77
Soy: 74

Argue until you're blue in the face, the simple fact is there are far higher quality protein sources than beef out there, however you look at it.

The only non-animal products listed as higher are soy

We both know that Whey, Milk and Eggs are permissible in a vegetarian diet, please don't gloss over something so obvious. I am not claiming a vegan diet is healthier. That said, thank you for linking me to that article, it was an interesting read (or should I say, some of the links therein were). I seldom ate the stuff anyway...

But you're sorta setting yourself up for a fall by posting an article like that because it invites me to do the same. So here we go, from the United States National Institute of Health. Bolding the relevant parts below for anybody who is just skimming this.

A new study adds to the evidence that eating red meat on a regular basis may shorten your lifespan. The findings suggest that meat eaters might help improve their health by substituting other healthy protein sources for some of the red meat they eat.


Past research has tied red meat to increased risks of diabetes, cardiovascular disease and certain cancers. The studies have also pointed to an elevated risk of mortality from red meat intake. But most of these studies were done over limited periods of time, had design flaws, or were done in populations with diets other than that of the typical American.

A research team led by Dr. Frank Hu of the Harvard School of Public Health set out to learn more about the association between red meat intake and mortality. They studied over 37,000 men from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study (beginning in 1986) and over 83,000 women from the Nurses' Health Study (beginning in 1980). All the participants were free of cardiovascular disease and cancer at the start of the study.

The participants filled out food frequency questionnaires every 4 years. The scientists also gathered information every 2 years on a variety of other health factors, including body weight, cigarette smoking and physical activity level. The study was supported by NIH’s National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), National Cancer Institute (NCI) and National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). It appeared online in Archives of Internal Medicine on March 12, 2012.

Almost 24,000 participants died during the study, including about 5,900 from cardiovascular disease and about 9,500 from cancer. Those who consumed the highest levels of both unprocessed and processed red meat had the highest risk of all-cause of mortality, cancer mortality and cardiovascular disease mortality. After adjusting for other risk factors, the researchers calculated that 1 additional serving per day of unprocessed red meat over the course of the study raised the risk of total mortality by 13%. An extra serving of processed red meat (such as bacon, hot dogs, sausage and salami) raised the risk by 20%.

The researchers estimated that substituting 1 serving per day of other foods—like fish, poultry, nuts, legumes, low-fat dairy and whole grains—for red meat could lower the risk of mortality by 7% to 19%. If the participants had all consumed fewer than half a serving per day (about 1.5 ounces) of red meat, the scientists calculated, 9.3% of the deaths in men and 7.6% of the deaths in women could have been prevented.

“Our study adds more evidence to the health risks of eating high amounts of red meat, which has been associated with type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke and certain cancers in other studies,” says lead author Dr. An Pan.

Since this was an observational study in which people reported their own food intake, it's possible that the associations seen may be due to other factors. When the researchers accounted for known risk factors in red meat—like saturated fat, dietary cholesterol and iron—they still couldn't account for all of the risk associated with eating red meat. Other mechanisms may be involved, or other unknown factors may affect the results. Further study will be needed to fully understand the connection between red meat consumption and health.

Is that worth it? I'm open minded on this - I enjoy the taste of meat - but I simply cannot justify the well documented health risks alongside the easily substituted nutritional value. The protein is subpar, and Iron, Zinc and Vitamin B12 are ridiculously abundant.

mattj said:
iirc you never listed any reasons why a "meat-free" diet is better. Unless I missed something.

pretty sure i did, but whatever, i'll repeat myself: because you have a significantly lower risk of 'all-cause of mortality, cancer mortality and cardiovascular disease mortality' (see above) and because virtually every other protein source is better, either in amino acid composition (milk, eggs, whey) or in terms of what else it can bring to your diet (nuts, seeds, fish if pescetarian like me, etc.). To my knowledge, this is inarguable.

I'll likely leave it at that unless somebody makes a tantalising counter-argument; I'm not trying to shove anything down anybody's throat...you don't need to justify your meat-eating to anybody, not even yourself. But a little bit of nutritional awareness never hurt anybody...
 
You are right vonFiedler, I apologize. Addressing your straightforward (and not intentionally obfuscated or misleading) argument is indeed a valid use of my time.

Take, for instance, your claim that "You are an omnivore. This is not a life choice, it is not naturalism. It is a scientific fact," and the fact that you have undeniably used that as the core of your entire argument--not only now, but also roughly 18 months in the past in the exact same debate with the exact same people.

I thought the way you handled criticism of that line of argument to be extremely forthcoming, personally: specifically, when members such Blame Game and Myzozoa wrongly pointed it out as a textbook case of the Naturalistic Fallacy, which is exactly 100% what you were totally not doing when you transparently presented basic scientific facts as having some sort of moral implication on whether or not humans should eat meat, it was incredibly "in good faith" of you (in stark opposition to "bad" faith) to point out that their extremely obvious and correct observation was in fact a complete strawman; after all, never in your possibly-dozens of invocations of the known fact that humans are omnivorous did you ever say, imply, or use as the entire basis of your entire position that that had any bearing on whether humans should embrace meat-eating as a valid and moral aspect of society.

No. Even though the entire point of both vegetarianism threads has been to discuss the moral implications of eating meat, your repeated appeal to the fact that humans are omnivores has nothing to do with that. It's merely an unrelated exercise in innocent scientific curiosity. We were wrong to suggest otherwise.

I thank you for standing up to our underhanded strawman (did you hear me? Strawman. Not a thorough summation of your presence in this thread). I thank you, too, for having the brazen intellectual candor to completely change your argument at the last second into some completely different thing about how your doctors told you it was healthier to eat meat or something.

i'm pretty sure that von saying "you're an omnivore" was less of a naturalistic fallacy and more of "when vegetarians confuse being an omnivore with eating meat i die a little inside" and actually had almost nothing to do with whether eating meat was a good idea
 
eat meat, dont eat meat, killing for meat, dont kill for meat.. moderation.. whatever.. people should just be tolerant of other people's choices and not cop them unless the issue is seriously bad for society as a whole or relates to a more personal issue
 
@capefeather. I guess you just don't know how often I hear every single one of those trite phrases, not every single one on th bingo board, just all the ones you mentioned. And I find your contextualization of those phrases disingenuous at best.

And you probably couldn't have responded to my admittedly overreacting post(s) in a worse manner. "JUST all the ones I mentioned"? Until now, I could ultimately conclude good faith on your part in that you posted that bingo board as a joke. But now I'm pretty sure that you actually believe it and share in its attitude. None of the responses I mentioned are even confrontational in and of themselves. Maybe they came up in confrontations between you and a non-vegetarian, but that's not the same. Fighting judgmental attitudes with a judgmental attitude doesn't help anybody.

Like a lot of things worth doing, vegetarianism is a learned skill that takes effort. This is true of everything involving a healthy lifestyle, really. What do you gain from having "proof" that people who don't have the same diet as you have no "good" reason for it? It's something that people should be commended for doing, not condemned for not doing. Plus, any of us can get "tripped up" on a health or moral vice of some sort. I wonder how many of you have smoked or drank or used any other drugs non-medicinally. I wonder how many of you have eaten fast food or any junk food, really. Hell, I wonder what you guys think of this forum's very own drug thread. How clean are your rooms?

Honestly, I saw little reason even to post here because we all knew how it would turn out. People talking about health benefits of vegetarianism, other people looking at the poll and deciding they need to justify their poll answers. I was only really about the statements about how people should try hunting for their own food, which I thought was kind of silly and overly dramatic. But now, some of the stuff on both sides of the fence is getting silly.

I'm sure many of you have every reason to lash out against non-vegetarians. Still, I've lived with people who are obsessed with health fads, cleanliness, study habits, etc. and yell at other people for not doing things they "should" be doing. It's not exactly pleasant. Please don't be like them. (And now that I've mentioned this, I hope people understand my skepticism and appeal to neutrality on some of the matters being talked about here.)
 
What you're arguing, Pwnemon, is that the bulk of vonFiedler's contribution to both vegetarianism threads has been to illuminate the technical definition of "omnivore," over and over again. Haha, nice, that would be way better. Too bad it isn't "true" or whatever.
 
i'm pretty sure that von saying "you're an omnivore" was less of a naturalistic fallacy and more of "when vegetarians confuse being an omnivore with eating meat i die a little inside" and actually had almost nothing to do with whether eating meat was a good idea

Yeah because it's so easy to always know what someone means when they throw out the word omnivore. It's not like they sometimes refer to their actual diet and other times refer to their physiology. If your proposition is true, it means he needs to stop purposefully misinterpreting people just because they choose a different lifestyle that he finds unbearable or something. And it is still a naturalistic fallacy or a strawman, it can be one or both, but it is one. If we accept your proposition it's still off-topic and obfuscating.

I'm kind of skeptical over the concern with protein within this thread, as if that would be what makes a difference in which diet is healthier for humans. On the whole, people in westernized countries get substantially more protein than they need anyway. I think it would be better to have a different metric because of this, though at the end I'm sure we'll figure out that the educated omnivorous diet is just the same as far as health goes as the educated vegetarians diet.
 
I'm kind of skeptical over the concern with protein within this thread, as if that would be what makes a difference in which diet is healthier for humans. On the whole, people in westernized countries get substantially more protein than they need anyway. I think it would be better to have a different metric because of this, though at the end I'm sure we'll figure out that the educated omnivorous diet is just the same as far as health goes as the educated vegetarians diet.
A good protein diet is one that includes intake of the 22 amino acids or foods that stimulate protein synthesis necessary for daily activity and essential amino acids which cannot be synthesized by the human body. This is where vegetarian diets are at its weakest: consuming essential amino acids. Essential amino acids are not found in vegetables. But if a vegeterian consumes enough beans, nuts, whole grain, lentils, or soys, etc, then their protein diet is sufficient. It is a little interesting how people are considered as omnivores and I assume its because selection acted on humans, so that generally a omnivorous diet is preferred due to certain benefits and constraints

True, there are times where there is excess proteins in our systems.. but that is mostly due to our lifestyle. Depending on what we do, we may or may not use the proteins needed to do a particular function. For example, Whey may be extremely useful for people that work on their muscles often, but can be in extreme excess if one does not work out. What kind of proteins and its amino acid constituents that fits your needs imo is more important than consuming a large amount of protein blindly just because you think more protein = better.
 
D-
did you just say you can't find essential amino acids in vegetables?
Yes, when you eat vegetables, you eat the stem, leaves, or roots which has little or if at all any essential amino acids. The foods you take in for example beans, rice, corn, etc.. your eating the seed which is not the vegetative part.
 
This is where vegetarian diets are at its weakest: consuming essential amino acids. Essential amino acids are not found in vegetables.

News flash: vegetarians can eat things other than vegetables! And some of these things provide every single amino acid (hint: I've mentioned them like a dozen times in this thread). Fun etymology fact but the word is actually derived from the Latin, vegetus, meaning energetic - not from the word vegetable.

Also, protein excess is virtually a non-factor. The body is very, very effective at dealing with excess protein and you'd need to damn near eat an entire cow within a few hours to see any negative effects.
 
News flash: vegetarians can eat things other than vegetables! And some of these things provide every single amino acid (hint: I've mentioned them like a dozen times in this thread). Fun etymology fact but the word is actually derived from the Latin, vegetus, meaning energetic - not from the word vegetable.

Also, protein excess is virtually a non-factor. The body is very, very effective at dealing with excess protein and you'd need to damn near eat an entire cow within a few hours to see any negative effects.
I never limited vegetarian choices to just vegetables. If I did, I must be a sponge. There are some studies that show exceptions such as vegetables like broccoli and carrots that do provide a good amount essential amino acids, but they are by no means "complete." Broccoli contains everything, but one essential amino acids. But I never said vegetarians are always lacking in essential amino acid intake, of course they can substitute meat for egg whites and seeds like beans, whole grains, etc which do have completeness.

Protein excess is not a bad thing because our body does degrade it readily with no to little issue. I don't question that. But my point is protein in excess is due to lifestyle, more protein is not = better. Getting the right proteins = better, but FDA doesn't force labeling of which proteins and its amino acids constituents does certain foods provide.
 
@Lee: I apologize if my post was vague, but what I was getting at was that, as far as I've read, and please do correct me if I'm wrong, each of your posts have included fish, which, unless I'm mistaken, is meat. Most fish meat is different than most red meat, although several fish have meat that is virtually indistinguishable from pork or chicken, but it's still meat. I may just be misinformed as to the technical definition of "quote-unquote meat", or I may have missed something you posted, but as far as I've read and understand you haven't advocated what I and many others understand to be a "meatless" diet.
 
mattj said:
. I may just be misinformed as to the technical definition of "quote-unquote meat", or I may have missed something you posted, but as far as I've read and understand you haven't advocated what I and many others understand to be a "meatless" diet.

Evidently. Here's a few definitions of meat to help you out.

'1. The edible flesh of animals, especially that of mammals as opposed to that of fish or poultry.'

2: animal tissue considered especially as food: a : flesh 2b; also : flesh of a mammal as opposed to fowl or fish.

Often, meat is used in a more restrictive sense – the flesh of mammalian species (pigs, cattle, lambs, etc.) raised and prepared for human consumption, to the exclusion of fish and other seafood, poultry, and other animals

I have no desire to argue semantics. If you have any intelligent opposition to anything I've said though, I'd be glad to listen.
 

heh, lee, i don't think anyone here will actually argue with you without throwing out a red herring, because your logic is perfectly nutritionally sound. The only thing that I have to say is that cape is right - there is no good reason to argue in favor of a vice but please don't bitch anyone out on their vices (not that I'm saying you were doing so, Lee).

oh, also, meat is delicious.
 
I agree entirely with you and Cape but I know I get carried away sometimes so I'm just repeating what I said at the top of the page.

Lee said:
I'm not trying to shove anything down anybody's throat...you don't need to justify your meat-eating to anybody, not even yourself. But a little bit of nutritional awareness never hurt anybody...
 
Calling people out on their vices is fine and if anything should be encouraged, not discouraged. I was happy when someone explained to me why they felt eating meat was wrong. I would be happy if someone pointed out that I accidentally say racist things, too. Some people aren't happy when that happens, and in fact get angry or defensive about it. Okay fine, but if I believe the world would be better off with less meat-eating (or racism or whatever) then I'm still well within my moral rights to inform them of such.

In practice, I rarely criticize weird old people for being racist, or my friends for eating meat. But if I did, I think it would be very strange if Pwnemon or Lee looked down on me for that.
 
This thread is making me hungry.

We should organize a Smogon meetup and cookoff to determine whose cuisine reigns supreme (Iron Chef will be suing me now). It'll also be fun if the entrants could provide some background on their choices and what influenced them.
 
What you're arguing, Pwnemon, is that the bulk of vonFiedler's contribution to both vegetarianism threads has been to illuminate the technical definition of "omnivore," over and over again. Haha, nice, that would be way better. Too bad it isn't "true" or whatever.

Kristoph... I don't necessarily want an infraction. I don't necessarily want to get this thread locked. But you are as full of shit right now as you were 18 months ago. Since you linked the thread, anyone can check and see that you have cherry picked one paragraph from a post of mine that had five paragraphs of mine and three sourced from an expert in the field. The "bulk" of that thread is turning out to be the same as the bulk of this one; calling you out on your theatrics and non-arguments.

I studied Nutrition for a year at college and competed as a county-level athlete for many years. The knowledge I gathered during that time contrasts with yours so unless you can bring me something more than 'but my doctor said!' I'll waste no more time on it as we both know it was the weakest part of your argument.

Ah I see. I myself studied Japanese for a year in college. Consider it dropped.

So you link another study that repeats pretty much what several meat eaters in this thread have said. Lower your meat intake. At 1.5 ounces or less, I currently have more than a year's worth of cruelty free protein, B12, Iron, Zinc. It doesn't have to abundant elsewhere. It's abundant in my fridge. Combine that with some eggs and fish which I also fucking love, and whey protein, and I'm fucking set for protein without much cost, effort, or health consequences.
 
Evidently. Here's a few definitions of meat to help you out.

...

I have no desire to argue semantics. If you have any intelligent opposition to anything I've said though, I'd be glad to listen.
Thanks for those definitions! I searched around a bit myself too. While parts of those definitions do note that some people don't define fish as meat, they also point out that some people don't define poultry, or even non-domesticated animals, as meat. I also found that, at least in my search, the vast majority of definitions don't make a distinction for fish.

If you don't consider fish to be meat, that's fine. I disagree, but whatever. And I don't have any desire to argue who's definition is right, but I am honestly curious why you, and others, don't consider the flesh of one living animal to be meat, while you do consider the edible flesh of another living animal to be meat. Is it just cultural, or the way you were brought up? I know a lot of Catholics don't consider fish to be meat generally because they want some quick protein during Lent. Other people don't consider it to be meat because it is usually physically different than most red meat and poultry (although there are several, common fish that have meat that is absolutely indistinguishable from pork or chicken).

I'm not at all interested in "arguing semantics", or proving that my definition of meat is best, but considering that my original point was the morality of eating meat, the definition of "meat" seems to be of at least a little importance.
 
Kristoph... I don't necessarily want an infraction. I don't necessarily want to get this thread locked. But you are as full of shit right now as you were 18 months ago. Since you linked the thread, anyone can check and see that you have cherry picked one paragraph from a post of mine that had five paragraphs of mine and three sourced from an expert in the field. The "bulk" of that thread is turning out to be the same as the bulk of this one; calling you out on your theatrics and non-arguments.

Hmmmm, I guess I actually missed that, sorry. You definitely did make some fairly valid points back there (such as 'Temple Grandin loves animals but also eats them, so that makes it okay'). As Thomas Jefferson said: "Valid points erase the invalidity of invalid points." Thus, I have no right to criticize your repeated, documented invocation of a clear fallacy, especially if theatrics are involved (as Thomas Jefferson said: "My reading of history convinces me that most bad arguments result from too much sarcasm").
 
this thread has become other people trying to not be background noise while kristoph and vonfielder have a bitch-off

please take it to pm, you two, some people want a good, civil discussion out of this
 
Sometimes you have to eat other animals. If we didn't do that millions of years ago, humanity would not have reached its current state of civilization. We'd all still be apes. Before we made agriculture, we had to kill animals for sustenance. In nature, killing animals for food is not murder; its survival.
 
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