H
HelpingHands
Guest
The Eucharist is our Divine food, of course.
:angel1: 
Dear PeterThere are three main fallacies with this article.
- A pound of bread is not by any measure equivalent to a pound of beef and they cannot be swapped. The beef contains far more energy per pound, as well as various other nutrients not found in bread, and some not found in any non-meat food. (My doctor has ordered me to eat at least one serve of meat every day because of my tendency to anemia.)
- As Gandhi I think said, āThe world has enough for everyoneās need, but not for everyoneās greed.ā There is plenty of food, both meat and vegetables, to go around, just that the injustices of our economic and political sydstems prevent some people from getting their share of it. And no, the worldās population is NOT exploding. Even the UN predicts the worldās population will never double again, and within 50 years world population will be FALLING.
- As mentioned, most meat animals worldwide are raised on non-arable land.
Ok Ok, if we solely used our agriculture products for food, our agriculture industry would be crippled. We have plenty of food to feed people, the problem is more if we can get it to the people in need, either due to political obsticals or natural obsticals, like natural disasters or lack of roads in the mountains. We have farmers who are paid not to farm feilds, while part of that is due to better land management, it does not indicate a lack of food. But the area now where agriculture is making innovations to keep farming profitable is to make the crops into hundreds of non-food products, many of these pioneered by George Washington Carver.Are snide remarks really necessary? :tsktsk:
I am not an idealogue either, especially on this topic, but I was responding to someone who told me I was off-topic. since original post was directed at meat-eating in general, and did not differentiate in how resources were used to raise, process and distribute the meat, I simply offered another point of view. I am simply astounded by the emotion aroused anytime this topic comes up. the issue of stewardship if the Earth is related to, but subordinate to, stewardship if the people who inhabit her.Dear PuzzleAnnie,
I donāt fall into the catagory of a āno meaterā or āpro meaterā. In fact, tonight I made homemade vegetarian pizza, with beef stir-fry on the side. So, Iām no ideologue, by any means. But, I do believe in good stewardship of the Earth and think that we could all do better.
You are right ā there is no lack of food in the world. Not producing or eating meat wouldnāt get a single mouthfull of food to the people who are hungry. Hunger is due to inability to get food to the people who need it. And that is often due to brutal and oppressive governments or warring factions who use hunger as a weapon.Ok Ok, if we solely used our agriculture products for food, our agriculture industry would be crippled. We have plenty of food to feed people, the problem is more if we can get it to the people in need, either due to political obsticals or natural obsticals, like natural disasters or lack of roads in the mountains. We have farmers who are paid not to farm feilds, while part of that is due to better land management, it does not indicate a lack of food. But the area now where agriculture is making innovations to keep farming profitable is to make the crops into hundreds of non-food products, many of these pioneered by George Washington Carver.
So, I can either eat 16 pounds of grain, or 1 pound of beef (and, if I eat the pound of beef, I can also get other nutrients not found in bread, and some not found in any non-meat food). Personally, I might be able to eat a pound of beef in one meal. But, I sincerely doubt I could eat 16 pounds of grain in one meal, however.It takes sixteen pounds of grain to produce a pound of feedlot beef. It takes only one pound of grain to produce a pound of bread.