Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 In a message dated 6/15/03 8:11:27 PM Eastern Daylight Time, ana_spryte writes: > I wonder how many meat-eaters would continue to do so if they had to hunt, > kill, and prepare the poor things themselves? I have a feeling most people > would rather pick some tomatoes... > As someone who has cleaned and prepared a variety of wild meat over the years - I wouldl much rather pick the tomato and I don't even like tomatoes much. The only way people are going to switch over to veggie eating is if they can be convinced that they will be healthier, feel better, have more stamina, concentration etc. Many of the vegan and veggie groups are going about things the wrong way and actually making things much worse. People who live in cities, which is the biggest portion of the population, cannot relate to feed lots, abbatoirs, packaging plants etc. They live in a vacuum where meat miraculously appears in little packages in store coolers and milk and dairy come out of cartons and containers. A great majority of city dwellers have never been involved with livestock, domestic or otherwise, their entire lives. A cow is something you see in pictures not in your back yard. They just can't relate. On the other hand, 95% of the population is concerned about their health, their arteries in particular, and can personally relate to and understand health issues. This is the area that should be focused on when trying to convert a resistant public. Health they can understand. And if you are trying to convince country folk, well, that's a different story. You really have to be careful what you say. Take for instance a person who has grown up around cattle and farmers all their life, like me. You can't make a statement like, stop killing cows it's cruel and unneccessary. Don't send your cows to the dog meat people, keep them, turn them out to pasture. Well maybe to the farmers it is necessary. I mean what do you do with the excess. Figure the average dairy farmer milks 60 cows. Every year he has 60 new calves. Let's say 20 of those forty are bulls. What does he do with them? You can't keep them, bulls are very dangerous and are not cute pet type animals. You can't turn them out with the other cows and you can't turn out two mature bulls together. In my area there are about 400 dairy farmers in the three counties. That's 8000 bulls a year between them that cannot be kept on the farm. What do you do with 8000 bulls. Think about it. I personally have heard the statement made that all dairy and beef and pork and chicken production should just stop. Immediately. Good Lord. Can you imagine the fallout?? Can you possibley imagine what it would be like to have all those animals running around loose? There would literally be millions of animals on the loose. They wouldn't be able to care or feed themselves. When winter came, what would they do? Who would feed them and shelter them. Thousands would die cruel deaths from starvation and sickness. I don't think the folks who make statements like that have much sense and they certainly haven't thought things through. Those animals would rampage. Your homes, your gardens, your streets and even your kids would not be safe. People would end up having to go around and slaughter the animals. I remember a few years ago an animal activist group went into a mink farmers and let hundreds of minks loose. They thought they were doing the proper thing. What they hadn't researched was that farmed minks have no idea what to do to survive in the wild. They have been born and bred in captivity. Food and water comes out of automatic feeders. They have no survivial instinct left. It was bred out of them so they could be kept in captivity. Those animals, the ones they couldn't round up again, were found all over the country side dead. Creamed by cars, starved, caught by wild animals. Was this a better death? I don't condone fur farming and I don't support the industry but honestly, letting those minks lose was simply another, and more cruel, form of slaughtering hundreds of helpless animals. I hope those people had a few nightmares and sleepless nights over their actions. Animal rights groups piss me off. Not all of them because there are some wonderful organizations out there that I support fully both financially and otherwise. The well organized, sensible groups that know you cannot change the world in one foul swoop but that you have to re-educate the youth and sensibly appeal to the health and the hearts of the adults. It's a slow up hill battle but hopefully one that will be won eventually. Sorry, I will now get off my high horse and return you too your regularly scheduled recipes. Heather in Ontario ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* " When you live in the shadow of insanity, the appearance of another mind that thinks and acts as yours does is something close to a blessed event. " -- R. Pirsig " HAM AND EGGS - A day's work for a chicken, a lifetime commitment for a pig. " Go Veggie. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 A great majority of city dwellers have never been > involved with livestock, domestic or otherwise, their entire lives. A cow is > something you see in pictures not in your back yard. They just can't relate. I find that in order to eat meat, you have to put it out of your mind that it was once a nice cute cow in a picture. If you think about that picture, you can't eat it! At least, that's why I don't eat meat. I can't get that picture out of my head! My point is that if more people thought about it, we'd have more vegetarians. In my area there are about 400 dairy farmers in the three > counties. That's 8000 bulls a year between them that cannot be kept on the > farm. What do you do with 8000 bulls. Think about it. Another good point. Well said and it makes me think about how I still eat cheese. By continuing to eat dairy products, because the milk cows have to continually have babies to produce milk, we are inadvertently supporting the beef industry. Thanks for saying it like that!! Now, I have to get rid of the cheese craving! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 In a message dated 6/16/03 5:24:27 PM Eastern Daylight Time, dave4sale writes: > Maybe you can just cook them something and not mention its > meatless. This is what i do for church pot luck meals. I always bring two or three veggie dishes. I seldom bring anything home with me. Most people are amazed that casseroles can be good and not have meat and that there are really great meatless balls out there with super nice brown gravy and all. You thinking about it being easier to change attitude than behaviour is most likely correct, unfortunately. It is had to cahnge people who are determined not to be either convinced or changed. heather in ontario ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* " When you live in the shadow of insanity, the appearance of another mind that thinks and acts as yours does is something close to a blessed event. " -- R. Pirsig " HAM AND EGGS - A day's work for a chicken, a lifetime commitment for a pig. " Go Veggie. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 I basically agree with you here, except that there is a big difference between caring about your health, and actually behaving in healthy ways. When I tell people about the health risks of meat, they are very skeptical because they've been spoonfed pro-meat and dairy propaganda since they were kids. Then some of them come out with the soy is bad for you propaganda and I have to combat that. A lot of these meateaters buy into the red meat is bad but chicken and fish are healthy idea, or the anything in moderation is okay idea. If someone has a bio degree they're automatically deemed correct. When I tell them about all the studies and statistics they say things like " i eat meat and i never had health problems " or " eating meat is natural and therefore healthy. " and of course the " how else do you get protein? " My point is, people will go to great lengths to justify their habit, because it feels good. There's a theory in psychology called cognitive dissonance. It follows that when a person realizes that their behavior is conflicting with their beliefs/ attitudes then they feel tension or dissonance. So naturally to relieve this uneasy feeling, they either have to change their behavior or change their attitude. Since the behavior is rewarding it's a lot easier to change their attitude. Therefore, my thinking is don't even focus on the health risks until you've convinced your potential converts to actually find some vegetarian meals they enjoy. That's what worked for me, i started trying veggie burgers and realized i didn't need meat anymore to enjoy eating. Then all the animal rights stuff started to really sink in. The only problem i've run into with this method is that there are people who insist all vegetarian food tastes yucky or is loaded with msg. Maybe you can just cook them something and not mention its meatless. Or challenge them to a blindfolded taste test, e.g. one is meat the other is veggie, can you tell which is which? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 The hypothetical " what would we do with the animals if meat was banned or everyone became vegetarian overnight? " question is really irrelevant. it's not going to happen as much as all us animal lovers would be thrilled by the news. if that ever happened it would be a slow gradual process that would lead to less and less breeding of livestock. It really just serves as another excuse for people who find themselves losing the ethcial argument to justify their eating habits. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 Just a side note to this post. I mentioned to my sister that I've been meat free for 3 1/2 days and her reply. " I like meat, meat is yummy! " . Who thinks meat is yummy??!! Our parents fed us meat every night growing up being in wisconsin, meat cheese eggs and milk, you'd think thats all we have here with how most people eat. Kelly dave <dave4sale wrote: I basically agree with you here, except that there is a big difference between caring about your health, and actually behaving in healthy ways. When I tell people about the health risks of meat, they are very skeptical because they've been spoonfed pro-meat and dairy propaganda since they were kids. Then some of them come out with the soy is bad for you propaganda and I have to combat that. A lot of these meateaters buy into the red meat is bad but chicken and fish are healthy idea, or the anything in moderation is okay idea. If someone has a bio degree they're automatically deemed correct. When I tell them about all the studies and statistics they say things like " i eat meat and i never had health problems " or " eating meat is natural and therefore healthy. " and of course the " how else do you get protein? " My point is, people will go to great lengths to justify their habit, because it feels good. There's a theory in psychology called cognitive dissonance. It follows that when a person realizes that their behavior is conflicting with their beliefs/ attitudes then they feel tension or dissonance. So naturally to relieve this uneasy feeling, they either have to change their behavior or change their attitude. Since the behavior is rewarding it's a lot easier to change their attitude. Therefore, my thinking is don't even focus on the health risks until you've convinced your potential converts to actually find some vegetarian meals they enjoy. That's what worked for me, i started trying veggie burgers and realized i didn't need meat anymore to enjoy eating. Then all the animal rights stuff started to really sink in. The only problem i've run into with this method is that there are people who insist all vegetarian food tastes yucky or is loaded with msg. Maybe you can just cook them something and not mention its meatless. Or challenge them to a blindfolded taste test, e.g. one is meat the other is veggie, can you tell which is which? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2003 Report Share Posted June 16, 2003 , Kelly Pavlik <wantstolearn1> wrote: > Just a side note to this post. I mentioned to my sister that I've been meat free for 3 1/2 days and her reply. " I like meat, meat is yummy! " . Who thinks meat is yummy??!! See Dave's post below: (your sister's reaction is a classic example of this!!!!!!) My point is, people will go to great lengths to justify > their habit, because it feels good. > > There's a theory in psychology called cognitive dissonance. It > follows that when a person realizes that their behavior is > conflicting with their beliefs/ attitudes then they feel tension or > dissonance. So naturally to relieve this uneasy feeling, they either > have to change their behavior or change their attitude. Since the > behavior is rewarding it's a lot easier to change their attitude. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2003 Report Share Posted June 17, 2003 <Who thinks meat is yummy??!! Not me!! ~Janice~ Be your own cheerleader! Encourage yourself every step of the way! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2003 Report Share Posted June 17, 2003 , " ~Janice~ " <serenity1@m...> wrote: > <Who thinks meat is yummy??!! > > Not me!! > ~Janice~ > Be your own cheerleader! Encourage yourself every step of the way! > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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