Originally posted by umslopogaas
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What is a vegetarian?
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View Post#11 jean, that is very strange ... the leather she is apparently happy to wear involved the death of a cow...
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThe point about modern intensively reared dairy cows, surely, is that not only are they selectively bred to produce huge quantities of milk (at the cost of unnaturally frequent pregnancies and greatly shorter lives) but male calves are killed at birth (as an unwanted byproduct) and female calves removed from their mothers unnaturally early in order to maximise the availability of milk for human consumption. It's pretty appalling from an animal welfare point of view. I took it that this is what jean was referring to....
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“We can confirm that the polymer pellet from which the base substrate is made contains a trace of a substance known as tallow,” said a BoE spokeswoman.
The point about modern intensively reared dairy cows, surely, is that not only are they selectively bred to produce huge quantities of milk (at the cost of unnaturally frequent pregnancies and greatly shorter lives) but male calves are killed at birth (as an unwanted byproduct) and female calves removed from their mothers unnaturally early in order to maximise the availability of milk for human consumption. It's pretty appalling from an animal welfare point of view. I took it that this is what jean was referring to.... Extensively reared beef cattle have a better time of it.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by umslopogaas View Post#13, Richard, rather than being killed at birth, arent male cows raised for a short time, then slaughtered for veal? But I agree, its a grim business all round, the price we seem happy to pay for cheap dairy products.
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If no living creatures were ever killed for the purpose of creating items of food, clothing or other human consumption, what would instead happen to those creatures? Obviously, none would any longer be bred for such purposes, but...
And what of animal based fertilisers used in the production of items for human consumption that do not directly depend upon the animals themselves? For example, should a strict vegan decline to use horse manure as a fertiliser for soil on which he/she grows fruit, vegetables and the like? How far does definitive veganism go?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIf no living creatures were ever killed for the purpose of creating items of food, clothing or other human consumption, what would instead happen to those creatures? Obviously, none would any longer be bred for such purposes, but...
And what of animal based fertilisers used in the production of items for human consumption that do not directly depend upon the animals themselves? For example, should a strict vegan decline to use horse manure as a fertiliser for soil on which he/she grows fruit, vegetables and the like? How far does definitive veganism go?
As far as production of manure is concerned, as far as I understand (and my understanding is admitedly pretty defective) this is one of the arguments thrown at vegetarians and vegans; namely: what better product is there for fertilisation purposes that manure? The answer is that one would continue using animals as fertilisers (and of course other land management purposes) in the same way as sheep, goats etc.
Incidentally, in what does the abovementioned problem of not being able to use cattle over a certain age for leather production consist? Does the skin become unusable?
(Leather is so good at keeping feet warm at this time of year...)
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThose creatures would presumably live until reaching a natural death.
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Getting back to the original question, a vegetarian is someone who doesn't have meat in their dinner. Where you or I would have a lamb chop, they will have a nut-roast or quiche. Where it gets complicated is with sauces, potatoes and rice. You could easily serve something that you think doesn’t contain meat, but for example, the potatoes have been basted with the juice from the meat. Also, watch out for things like table mats that contain wood or cork, which are actually from trees and you may not realise it. Hot dogs are a no-no, even though they are not made from dogs - they can contain pork, which is from a pig - an animal.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThey wouldn't have been bred in the first place, ergo wouldn't exist in the first place. We're looking at the current state of a process that goes back 10,000 years, to the start of the agricultural revolution. Yuval Noah Harari's "Sapiens" good on this.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAlso, watch out for things like table mats that contain wood or cork, which are actually from trees and you may not realise it. Hot dogs are a no-no, even though they are not made from dogs - they can contain pork, which is from a pig - an animal.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostGetting back to the original question, a vegetarian is someone who doesn't have meat in their dinner. Where you or I would have a lamb chop, they will have a nut-roast or quiche.
Where it gets complicated is with sauces potatoes and rice. You could easily serve something that you think doesn’t contain meat, but for example, the potatoes have been basted with the juice from the meat. Also, watch out for things like table mats that contain wood or cork, which are actually from trees and you may not realise it.
I remember when I was about 12, having Sunday lunch with my grandparents who had spent much of their married life in India - also there were a high-caste Indian couple, business acquaintances of my grandfather, who were vegetarian. My grandmother had prepared roast lamb for us, something vegetarian for them. It was only looking back that I worked out what she should have done....but they'd lived there in the last years of the raj.....
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