Depends who it isWhat price do you put on human life?
In general? Not much. Supply and demand etc.

Oh, enlightened one. You of vast intellect and absolute morals, I assume would prefer a world of vegetarians. When one day you can lift your head proud and say "Yes, all animals can live in peace and free from mankinds evil hands"I view the spread of vegetarianism as education working well,

So in your magical world, a cow, for example, takes in less food than it provides? I mean, that's the only way what you say can be true, right? The cow, as it grows, and all the food it eats and all the waste it produces, takes up less farmland than the vegetation grown to replace the nuetrition the cow provides as food. Is this really where your arguement is going or did you mean something else by that?homercles wrote:Let me spread some education of my own for you enlightened vegetarians:
A world wide vegetarian population is logistically IMPOSSIBLE. It CAN NOT happen. There is not enough farmland on this planet to feed a 100% vegetarian society.




When it comes to drinking milk (something I rarely do), I drink soy milk. Mostly, I use milk (again soy milk) in liquid form for coffee. When I say I am a vegetartian, not a vegan, its not because of my direct consumption of eggs and milk, its a conciet to the likelihood that the organic breads I buy are probably made, in part, with organic eggs and milk.Dar, you drink milk from cows? You call hunting barbaric? You ever see a milk farm, vegan boy? ...there is no reason in this modern world to drink milk.

Of course it is easier. Especially when stuck trying to defend meat eating and hunting with logic and reason. But you could at least give the latter a try. The excersize might do your mind some good.I suppose it would have been easier to post offensive anti-PETA pictures than to try and use reason and logic


Those two sententences don't even make sense together. Nice try though. To give deer back their "natural predators" would be to reintroduce wolves, cyote, puma, etc. back into their natural habitat. But wait, what is the biggest group lobbying against introducing natural predators back into the wildlife? HUNTERS! And what group brought wolves to near extinction because they took from deer population in the first place? HUNTERS!The deers natural predator is the human being. It wasnt always that way, but it is now.

1. It hurts the cow.Why does it bother you that someone else eats a cow? It's not hurting you just shut the fuck up about it and eat your soy burger.



Second time, same thread. Since when is arguing your point on a politcal message board "shoving your belief's in other people's faces"?...but please don't go shoving your beliefs in other people's faces to prove a point.
So now you are saying KILL ALL THE COWS SO I CAN HAVE MY VEGGIE PLANET.Aaeamdar wrote: So in your magical world, a cow, for example, takes in less food than it provides? I mean, that's the only way what you say can be true, right? The cow, as it grows, and all the food it eats and all the waste it produces, takes up less farmland than the vegetation grown to replace the nuetrition the cow provides as food. Is this really where your arguement is going or did you mean something else by that?
You must concentrate harder to achieve enlightenment, Grasshopper.Atokal wrote:So now you are saying KILL ALL THE COWS SO I CAN HAVE MY VEGGIE PLANET.Aaeamdar wrote: So in your magical world, a cow, for example, takes in less food than it provides? I mean, that's the only way what you say can be true, right? The cow, as it grows, and all the food it eats and all the waste it produces, takes up less farmland than the vegetation grown to replace the nuetrition the cow provides as food. Is this really where your arguement is going or did you mean something else by that?
DOH back to the drawing board.
Regardless of Toker's moronic Cartalesque swipe at this.. a lot of grazing land isn't suitable for any kind of modern farming; hilly, rocky, poor soil, hell even the desert in Australia is used to graze cattle.. you can't just turn all that into arable land.Aaeamdar wrote:So in your magical world, a cow, for example, takes in less food than it provides? I mean, that's the only way what you say can be true, right? The cow, as it grows, and all the food it eats and all the waste it produces, takes up less farmland than the vegetation grown to replace the nuetrition the cow provides as food. Is this really where your arguement is going or did you mean something else by that?homercles wrote:Let me spread some education of my own for you enlightened vegetarians:
A world wide vegetarian population is logistically IMPOSSIBLE. It CAN NOT happen. There is not enough farmland on this planet to feed a 100% vegetarian society.


While I am not a religious person, I seem to recall you railing on all the religious people on the board and in the world for stating their beliefs.Second time, same thread. Since when is arguing your point on a politcal message board "shoving your belief's in other people's faces"?
I mean, that is why you read and post here, right? To listen and discuss on various "current events" issues withteh other posters here? I don't see anywhere in this thread when I have advocated going out into places where people are eating meat and beratting them for it. I see myself posting arguements on a message board devoted to political discusion and providing references in that same forum for those that want to read more. This is "shoving it in people's faces"?

You either don't read very carefully or just read into things what you want to. I wouldn't worry about it though, its a fairly common trait.I seem to recall you railing on all the religious people on the board and in the world for stating their beliefs.




LOL, when I was walking to my PC to come check this, I said this exact same thing in my head knowing that if you would post in this thread, this is what you would say. God damn you're a fucking parrot.Midnyte_Ragebringer wrote:See Dar when you are a negative cunt, you breed more negativity. When will you simpletons learn?


Do you get all teary-eyed when you read a story of some criminal that gets killed in the course of committing a crime (let's assume the crime is serious but would not be life-threatening)? Do you feel sad for the drunk that does something stupid while drunk and dies? Do you find the "Darwin Awards" posts ammusing?Dar, what do you want us to say? You're right about eating no meat, you can get what you need from plants. And? I seem to recall all of this started by pretty much saying that these hunters got what they deserved. I have yet to see any justification for what you did other than you being a sick fuck.
Well its far more complicated than that, which my posts I think have made fairly clear. If it were a simple matter of "killing animals that have emotions is cruel" then these posts would be a lot shorter. But I am looking forward to where you are going with it.2. You justify not eating meat because killing animals that have emotions is cruel. Thats what I wanted to know. I wanted you to say that there was a difference between taking a life with emotions vs taking a life that is without emotions. Thank you.
Are you talking about Homercle's "magic cow" theorem? Its non-sense. A cow takes far more "space" to raise for the amount of food it produces than does any grain or even lower denisity veatables like tubers or leafy plants. You have to feed the cow. What do you feed it? In the US, mostly its fed corn if its a high-efficiency feedlot cow. This corn is grown more compactly than corn grown for human consumption, but not anywhere close to the ratio of inefficency of the cow's conversion of that corn. So even merely growning vegatables in place of all the places corn if grown for food-animal consumption would provide more food than the food-animals themselves. Add to that the area for the cows themselves and add to that again places to process the truely unreal amount of natural waste the cow produces over its short lifetime. Its not even close (to finish the formula you would need to add again the difference in space required to process meats as opposed to processing grains and then subtract out the land used that cannot be made suitable for human consuable vegetable crops - either way its not even close). This is just one of many many myths stated (but not supported) by the meat industry. It makes no snse. Has no factual backing, but enough people (a really really really high percentage of our population) want to eat meat, have some inkling of what that means, and are willing to accept any reasonble (even if unsupportable) assertion that will allow them to believe meat is neccessary. Its not.3. I have yet to see you argue that it would be impossible to feed an entire world population that are vegetarians. As far as I know, it would be, there isn't enough space on Earth to provide such a ting.


A better analogy would be, if a drunk was acting all retarded, then some other drunk comes up and shoots him, in which case, I would feel bad for him.Do you get all teary-eyed when you read a story of some criminal that gets killed in the course of committing a crime (let's assume the crime is serious but would not be life-threatening)? Do you feel sad for the drunk that does something stupid while drunk and dies? Do you find the "Darwin Awards" posts ammusing?




Experiments prove
plants have feelings
Posted: 5:10 PM (Manila Time) | Jun. 23, 2003
Inquirer News Service
THE CURRENT controversy over the removal by the Metro Manila Development Authority of old trees along Katipunan Street in Quezon City to ease traffic congestion has focused public attention on the importance of trees to human life on earth.
It is now common knowledge that plants and trees serve living creatures in multifarious ways. They prevent floods and soil erosion, give off oxygen, provide food and shelter for both animals and man and a source of medicine to fight all kinds of diseases.But neither the environmentalists nor the average modern individual is aware of the hidden life of plants or of their extra sensory powers.
It was the American polygraph expert, Cleve Backster, who first brought up the incredible idea that plants are aware of their environment and have rudimentary emotions or feelings. Subsequently, he proved that hypothesis beyond doubt. He discovered that plants reacted to the death of other living creatures even though the doomed victims were not in the same room.
His original experiment consisted of attaching polygraph electrodes on the leaves of philodendron plants. In another room, Backster set up a machine that would dump live brine shrimp at random into boiling water. As a control the machine occasionally would dump water without shrimp to see if the plants in the other room simply reacted to the mechanical process rather than to the death of the shrimp.
To ensure that there is no human intervention, the experiment was conducted without any researcher in the laboratory. Everything was done automatically. One polygraph was not attached to any plant as a control to see if its readings would be different from the three polygraphs attached to the plants. Once the machines began to operate, experimenters left the building, only to return later to verify the results.
And what were these results? "The plants in separate rooms connected to separate polygraphs," reported John Whitman in "The Psychic Power of Plants" (published by new American Library, New York, 1974), "responded to the death of the brine shrimp by showing acute stress curves similar to those shown by humans under intense pressure-either mental or physical."
Furthermore, according to Backster, "The plants gave no response to the dumping of water which contained no shrimp at all." It shows the shrimp somehow was able to communicate to the plants in the other room its "death signals," much like a person involved in a fatal accident is able to communicate telepathically his death to loved one miles away from the scene of the accident.
Plant identifies killer
In another fascinating and rather incredible experiment, Backster was able to identify a plant killer through his polygraph machine. The plants pointed to the real killer by reacting wildly to him.
Here is how Whitman described that classic experiment in the book mentioned earlier: "One of six students was chosen to kill a plant in a room with only one plant present. Neither Backster nor the five other students knew who the killer would be. The chosen student sneaked into the room with two plants and destroyed one of them. Backster later asked the students to come into the room one at a time.
"Each of the innocent students came into the room and the plant showed no reaction to any of them. But when the guilty student came into the room, the plant seemed to go into a frenzy which showed up as wild activity on the polygraph tracings."
Other experiments conducted by different researchers showed that plants responded positively to classical music and very badly to rock or heavy metal music. They also responded well to words of encouragement and positive emotions from people around them. Maybe that's why the fig tree withered and died when Christ cursed it for not bearing fruits, as related in the New Testament.
City dwellers have not given much importance to plants. Maybe it's because they are not aware of their importance and sensitivity. As the above scientific experiments have shown, plants and trees have emotions and even psychic powers. Maybe we should tell MMDA Chair Bayani Fernando and his over-enthusiastic agents that plants are "human," too!
