Vegetarian bullshit. I think...

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Broomstick
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Post by Broomstick »

The Guid wrote:I would ask why on earth we started eating meat since apparently we are so unadapted to it etc.
It's a compact source of energy and nutrients.

Even a lot of animals considered true herbivores will eat animal flesh of some sort. Cows, sheep, goats, and deer all consume insects with their plant diet. There's even a parasite that cycles between ants and cows that depends on the fact cows eat insects in order to continue to exist. Deer in Upper Pennisula of Michigan and on Isle Royale have been observed eating fish washed up on the shores of the Great Lakes. Cockatiels, who are undisputably primary seed-eaters, not only relish the occassional insect or three but the ones at my house will also happily raid your roast beef sandwhich - no doubt, they seldom eat cow in the wild but that has more to do with size differential than inability to digest mammal meat. In fact, the health and longevity of several parrot species kept in captivity has improved significantly over the past couple of decades with the recognition that, although mostly vegetarian in diet parrots actually ARE omnivores. Of course, if folks had just bothered to observe wild macaws hunting rabbits in the wild (which they do occassionally) they might have known that.

Hummingbirds, those quintessential nectar-sippers, are also dependant on consuming the insects found also sipping nectar in those same flowers. Without that dab of animal protein they weaken and are unable to successfully fledge their young.

The argument that chimps don't hunt and/or eat meat it bogus. Goodall's early research - which the website quotes - seemed to indicate that, but her later research (here conviently ignored) not only documents delibrate (and cooperative!) hunting of small monkeys and other prey by chimps, and willingness to scavenge meat, but it also documents delibrate canabalism. Hmm... if we're supposed to follow a chimp-like diet, should we be eating the occassional fellow human?

In any case, even a close evolutionary relationship doesn't dictate similar diet. The giant panda is most closely related to either bears or raccoons, but has a radically different diet - it subsists almost entirely on bamboo, and eats no animal protein (aside from contaminating insects, presumably) despite its pointy teeth, lack of sweat glands, and relatively short intestinal tract for a dedicated herbivore. Nor could a bear or raccoon subsist on the diet that pandas thrive on. (The giant panda is, in fact, a good counter-argument to intelligent design, being a strange collection of jury-rigs to turn a former omnivore/carnivore into an herbivore. Any diety that "designed" this animal must have had a 3-day bender just before starting the project)
Meat-eaters have fast enough reflexes to ambush or overtake a victim. You do not. Try catching a pig or a chicken with your bare hands; see what happens.
Actually, there are ample cases of humans in hunting prime of life (15-40 years of age) running down rabbits, ambushing various fowl, and catching fish with their bare hands. It's not easy and it takes practice, but humans ARE quite capable of capturing small prey unassisted by technology.

Coyotes can't run down a rabbit on the unobstructed flat, either - which is why they don't try it. They sneak up and ambush, and that's what humans do. Lions can't outrun antelopes on the flat, that's why they stalk and pounce. Cheetahs are the only mammalian hunters that really can outrun their prey... but only over very short distances. The only predators that routinely exceed the speed of their prey are hunting birds, and even they attempt to approach without alerting their prey. Predatory reptiles rely on ambush-and-pounce. There are whole categories of predatory fish that rely on camoflague-and-ambush, and others in the ambush-and-pounce, and even fast predators like sharks and tuna will sneak up on dinner whenever possible. The whole idea that predators rely solely on speed to eat is bogus.

Humans use technology because it makes us better hunters, able to bring in more protein/fat with less of our own energy expended, and also at less risk to our own selves.
Boyish-Tigerlilly wrote:Don't humans have a stronger, deadlier bite than some dogs?

Humans have a filthier bite than dogs. Human bites are far more likely to become infected than dog or cat bites. The grinding action of a human jaw can cause as much damage - although of a different sort and character - as a small domestic dog or housecat bite. The human jaw is sufficiently strong to crack small bones, such as found in fingers, at least in some cases.

Not that it matters whether the animal biting you is a carnivore or herbivore in many cases. A horse is a dedicated herbivore but a horse bite can sever human fingers. I know of one instance where a draft horse bit off the arm of a small child. Just because the biter doesn't chew and swallow doesn't mean the bite isn't serious. Anything that stands around grinding up plant food 16 hours a day is going to have some serious biting equipment.
Justforfun000 wrote:Well...It's not THAT extreme...you would need to go an extremely long time as a TRUE vegan before the B12 deficiency would even be serious....years from what I recall..
About 10 years, on average - assuming you start with normal/adequate reserves. However, by the time overt symptoms appear the damage is done and it's permanent. You can't reverse the neurological damage by consuming B12, only halt progression.
There are many cultures that do fine on a vegetarian diet, and it can be a very healthy lifestyle choice
There are two types of healthy, strict vegetarians: those who use supplements, and those with contaminated foodstuffs.
Certain traditional societies are held up as examples of "pure" vegetarianism or even veganism. For example, Jains are forbidden to kill, even insects. In India, generations have been born, lived, reproduced, and died all apparently on an animal-free diet in good health. Then Britain started reporting B12 deficiency other other problems in Jains that had been living in Britain for extended periods. The eventual determination was that back in India much of the food consumed by Jains had some form of contamination - small insects, insect feces, and rodent feces - which were providing enough trace nutrients to keep everyone healthy (you can extract B12 from most animal shit... but somehow I doubt that's anyone's first choice...) Britain's much stricter regulations regarding contamination resulted in food with almost no such "supplements". And it's insect and fecal contamination that keeps many a "primative" vegetarian healthy in regards to trace nutrients.
This also side-steps the whole issue of vegetarians in India consuming significant quantities of dairy, either as milk, cheese, yoghurt, or the favorite cooking oil ghee, which is derieved from butter, that is, milk fat. Diary products, including ghee, are sources of B12.

The ideal human diet probably would consist of somewhere between 1/3 and 1/2 the meat of a normal western diet, with that replaced by vegetables and fruit. But there's really no one "ideal" diet - the ideal would vary with age, physical activity, and individual variation. Human children NEED fats and oils to grow and mature properly. A man engaged in heavy physical labor, or a mother nursing a child, require significantly more calories than a sedentary adult of either gender. Many adult humans are unable to digest lactose and should consume little or no dairy. Many humans are intolerant to gluten and should avoid many grains. A variation in the Mediterranean area that protects against malaria puts fava beans (among others) permanently off limits. As humans age they require fewer high-calorie foods -- up to a point, because in very old age the digestive tract is less efficient and high calorie foods maintain energy better. Women require more calcium and iron than men. And so on, and so forth. There is no one, perfect diet for all humanity.
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Post by Justforfun000 »

Brilliant Broomstick. You summed it up as comprehensively as possible. You have more patience than I do. lol. I didn't feel like getting into the entire picture.

I agree wholeheartedly regarding the half to a third reduction of meat. Most people eat too much of it. We'd be healthier if we were more moderate.

My basic "bible" of food has always been based on a couple of core tenets. Ideally eat 80% alkaline reacting food to 20% acid producing. Avoid Fried foods and white bread like the plague. Try not to eat heavy combinations of meat and starches at the same meal, or more than one starch at a sitting. Only have water with meals and not during. (Sometimes I'll make exceptions with wine or beer. :wink: )

I try to stick to those basic ideas and I feel very healthy when I do. I also believe in supplementation with vitamins and certain herbs, but I am also a huge proponent of cycling such things. The body becomes dependent on anything that you give it as a crutch, and my sources tell me that if you take vitamins every day you may run the risk of your body not assimilating them properly from food because it's used to the substitute. I don't know if this can be verified, but it seems reasonably possible and besides, it saves me money on them. :D
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Post by Edi »

The only thing one needs to identify that site as bullshit is to know that besides herbivores and carnivores, there are such things as omnivores.

Nothing else to add, Broomstick has been, as usual, very thorough.

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Post by Rye »

="vegetarian creation ministries"]Our closest relatives are primates. Very few eat animals, and those who do typically stick to things like insects, not cows and pigs. Jane Goodall, famous for her extensive study of apes while living with them, found that it was very rare for the primates she saw to eat other animals.
Well, I'm sure many of you are shocked to hear the majority of primates like tiny monkeys eat insects and not cows. I liked how the author TOTALLY glossed over how chiimps, that is, our closest living relatives, with incredibly similar dentition, even ritualise hunting other animals. It glosses over how they even kill their own babies and eat their meat if they're unsuccessful. Yeah, "meat eating is unnatural". :roll:
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Post by wolveraptor »

I'll tell ya' what's unnatural: all them youngsters walkin' 'round on the ground, like they's some sort o' flatfoot. I tell ya': the world ain't what it usta be. Back in my day, we all swung in the trees, like proper apes. That's what we oughta' be doin'.
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Post by Broomstick »

Justforfun000 wrote:I agree wholeheartedly regarding the half to a third reduction of meat. Most people eat too much of it. We'd be healthier if we were more moderate.
Personally, I try to regard meat as more of condiment than an entree.

Although once or thrice a year I will go out and have a slab of steak. Nothing wrong with occassional indulgence. :D
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Post by tharkûn »

Utter rubbish.

Clawless carnivores - snakes, predatory fish, octopi, innumerable parasites
Herbivores with claws - Koala bears, Sloths

Toothless predators - constricting snakes, flamingos, platypi, innumerable amphibians
Toothy herbivores - Elephant have largest pointing teeth on record which are quite good at tearing flesh, they are herbivores.
Toothless herbivores - flamingos

Poreless herbivores: Elephants
Carnivores with pores: Bears

The digestive stuff is crap, in order to conduct plant catalysis you need certain functions, while pure carnivores might not require these things, omnivores certainly would. Of course the fact that humans are better equiped to metabolize saturated fat (found only in a very few select plants, but plentiful in animals), you know things like the prescence of lingual lipase and delocalized gastric lipase in the stomach.

The truth is humans historicly have been omnivores. Given the diets people have subsisted upon we run from the Inuit to Jains. Many of these measures are rules of thumb, ones that clearly need not apply when we can cook, use tools, etc. Numerous, almost ubiquitious counter examples exist and given a non-cherry picked list I can safely call humans omnivores.
"A cat will salivate with hungry desire at the smell of a piece of raw flesh but not at all at the smell of fruit. If man could delight in pouncing upon a bird, tear its still-living limbs apart with his teeth, and suck the warm blood, one might conclude that nature provided him with meat-eating instinct. On the other hand, a bunch of luscious grapes makes his mouth water, and even in the absence of hunger he will eat fruit because it tastes so good.
What utter tripe. Humans can and do salivate at blood, many people do like the taste of rare beef, raw fish, and raw eggs. Should we tell children the world over that if they were meant to eat brussel sprouts, aspargus, etc. they would all salivate at the smell? We like the smell of cooked meat better because cooked meat is healthier, and we've been cooking our meat for health reasons for a damn long time.
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Post by Civil War Man »

Dark Hellion wrote:You can also compare us to animal near relatives in the primates to find that they are generally omnivorous as well.
And frankly, we all know that one day Chimps will invent cutlery, and then we are all fucked! :lol:
I immediately thought of the whole omnivore thing that burns the entire argument to the ground, but Dark Hellion's comment here made me think of something else:

Wasn't there an article quoted here recently that said humans were also closely genetically linked to dogs? :wink:
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Post by wolveraptor »

tharkûn wrote:Clawless carnivores - snakes, predatory fish, octopi, innumerable parasites
Herbivores with claws - Koala bears, Sloths

Toothless predators - constricting snakes, flamingos, platypi, innumerable amphibians
Toothy herbivores - Elephant have largest pointing teeth on record which are quite good at tearing flesh, they are herbivores.
Toothless herbivores - flamingos
In my opinion, hippos are a better example of herbivores with formidable dentition.

But anyways, I think this is an unfair comparison, because all of said carnivores have some natural feature that lets them tear food. All raptors, for example, are toothless, yet have viciously curved beaks and talons. Their point was that we don't have any of that.

I think a better explanation is that our ape ancestors had long ago lost claws, and that when we moved into our predatory stage, we had to make our claws, not grow them. We do have the same equipment as predators, and it is arguably superior; spears do, after all have greater reach.
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Post by CaptJodan »

Solauren wrote:I counter there entire website and claims by people dropping dead while on Vegitarian and Vegan diets without taking the vitamins and supplements to replace what you lose by not eating meat.

Oh, and lets not forget the kids that do not develop properly and/or die on those diets.
While I can see the possible dangers of a vegan diet, provide proof that vegetarian diets lead to inproper development or death. Provide proof that one must take suppliments (by that I mean pilled from, of course vegetarians can get some proteins from milk, cheese, and tofu or bean based products) in order to not drop dead.

That argument is the other extreme, and one without any kind of fact to hold it up. There are 3 vegetarians in my family, myself included, and none of us have dropped dead because of it.

A vegetarian diet, done inproperly, can be just as bad for you as any meat based diet done improperly. (one of my grandparents has chosen to be a vegetarian, but then eats large quantities of sugar based foods and desserts, and now has congestive heart failure at the age of 79) But by no means must you take pills every day to eat properly on a vegetarian diet. (89 year old grandmother, with no signs at all of dying anytime soon)
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Post by Turin »

This evolutionary argument is crap. Evolution into modern humans actually required the consumption of meat, in order to continue the development of our energy-expensive cognitive abilities (i.e., to make our brain bigger).

I've read some great articles on this in the past in Scientific American, and I was able to quickly dig up this article. Choice quote:
Foley & Lee (1991), and Gibons (1998) have argued that the change in cranial capacity during the course of hominid evolution required dietary and developmental strategies that would sustain the cost of a large brain.
Also, check out this (warning - PDF) more recent (2002) article published in SciAm that's more comprehensive on the subject.
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Post by Broomstick »

wolveraptor wrote:But anyways, I think this is an unfair comparison, because all of said carnivores have some natural feature that lets them tear food. All raptors, for example, are toothless, yet have viciously curved beaks and talons. Their point was that we don't have any of that.
Is this the time to point out that flamingos and baleen whales are both predators in that they eat shrimp/krill/etc. but neither has teeth or claws?

A big problem with the site is that it defines predator and herbivore far too narrowly and strictly - nature is a lot messier, with slop over borders.
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Post by KeVinK »

"vegitarian bullshit"?

Well, given that bulls only eat plants, I guess by definition their ...

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Post by weemadando »

Yes. You have. And fucking fix your sig. Its huge.
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Post by KeVinK »

weemadando wrote:Yes. You have. And fucking fix your sig. Its huge.
Pleased to meet you as well.

More in line with the topic, the site linked is seriously flawed.

I know one person who is a vegetarian for religious reasons.
While I do not share his convictions, I respect his right to honor them.

I also have a cousin who is an assitant medical examiner for Jamaica County, Long Island and decided she was a vegetarian sitting in line at Wendy's drive-through on her way home from work one summer evening a decade or so ago. She'd spent her day trying to reassemble a body someone had cut up and left in a garbage bag a few weeks before. I can certainly understand her motivation.

However, the human machine is not designed to run on vegies. Biologically we're omnivores.

BTW: What would you recommend I change about my sig?
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Post by SirNitram »

KeVinK wrote:
weemadando wrote:Yes. You have. And fucking fix your sig. Its huge.
Pleased to meet you as well.

BTW: What would you recommend I change about my sig?
Reduce it's height.

Please observe this is a Supermoderator advising you to do this. The next step is someone forcibly removing the size. As Ando said in no uncertain terms, 'it's fucking huge'.
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Post by KeVinK »

KeVinK wrote: BTW: What would you recommend I change about my sig?
SirNitram wrote: Reduce it's height.

Please observe this is a Supermoderator advising you to do this. The next step is someone forcibly removing the size.
Sorry for the delay in compliance, I was away from my computer when you posted. I knew it was within the character count, but had not given a thought to its height. Once you called my attention to it, though, I saw your point immediately.

I've removed Schiller's "Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens."* It's been my motto since my one year of high school German, but perhaps forty years is long enough.
(*"Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain.")

Kept my wife's quote, though. I'll stop using my name first.

I also condensed the links to my published works.

Overall, I think I've brought it down to an acceptable size -- at least it appears to my untrained eye to be roughly congruent with several others. If, however, it is still too tall and I am not around to respond to a second directive in a timely manner, please feel free to remove the link to the Strange New Worlds anthologies. I'm sentimental about them because they are my first professional sales, but they're a few years old.

Either way, I can see I'll have to spend some time getting to know how things are done around here. (I did read the FAQ, rules, etc., but apparently did not retain as much as I should have.) Is there an area for newcomers to introduce themselves? If there is, I've managed to overlook it.
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Post by tharkûn »

But anyways, I think this is an unfair comparison, because all of said carnivores have some natural feature that lets them tear food. All raptors, for example, are toothless, yet have viciously curved beaks and talons. Their point was that we don't have any of that.
Nope. Flamingos are filter feeders who don't rend their prey. Constrictors squeeze the bugger to death and swallow whole. Need I go on to blood suckers and other fun predators which do not tear their food?

Nature doesn't give a damn about human classifications; if there is way to take nourishment out of an animal body without tearing it (and there are many), some animal, somewhere on the planet, somewhere in time most likely used it. Statisticly big teeth, claws, beaks, etc. may be common, but they are not defining.
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