Being a lacto-ovo vegetarian causes less harm to animals, to personal health, and to the environment than does the standard American diet. I've already provided evidence for this being the case in this thread.chownah wrote: Whatever you do don't think about what happens to a hen when she reaches menopause.
chownah
the great vegetarian debate
Re: the great vegetarian debate
Last edited by Santi253 on Sun Aug 20, 2017 4:24 am, edited 1 time in total.
Non-violence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice. - Mahatma Gandhi
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Re: the great vegetarian debate
She comes back as chicken nuggets?chownah wrote:Whatever you do don't think about what happens to a hen when she reaches menopause.Santi253 wrote:Since becoming vegetarian, I am not only eating healthier food, but I am also trying new foods like kale and avocados, and being more creative than I was before with food. Until recently, I never ate avocados, and now they are the main source of healthy fat in my diet.
A few minutes ago, I made baked avocados with eggs where the pit goes. I would have never made this before becoming vegetarian. While I normally just eat egg whites, this dish calls for the whole egg, and it was very satisfying.
Nowadays, the only thing I eat that you take out of the freezer and pop in the microwave is either veggie burgers or frozen vegetables. I used to live on frozen chicken nuggets, TV dinners, and pizza.
chownah
Kim
Re: the great vegetarian debate
Gross.Kim OHara wrote: She comes back as chicken nuggets?
Kim
Non-violence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice. - Mahatma Gandhi
http://www.matthewsatori.tumblr.com
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Re: the great vegetarian debate
Indeed.Santi253 wrote:Gross.Kim OHara wrote: She comes back as chicken nuggets?
Kim
Life's like that.
Kim
Re: the great vegetarian debate
I'm thankful that I have a choice to eat some kale with nonfat ranch dressing instead.Kim OHara wrote:Indeed.Santi253 wrote:Gross.Kim OHara wrote: She comes back as chicken nuggets?
Kim
Life's like that.
Kim
Non-violence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice. - Mahatma Gandhi
http://www.matthewsatori.tumblr.com
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Re: the great vegetarian debate
I warned you not to think about it!....but do you ever listen to me?.....No.Santi253 wrote:Gross.Kim OHara wrote: She comes back as chicken nuggets?
Kim
chownah
Re: the great vegetarian debate
It only reminds me of how poor quality the meat is in this country, which is another reason to be vegetarian. Chicken nuggets, as well as ground beef and hot dogs, are often made from pink slime.chownah wrote:I warned you not to think about it!....but do you ever listen to me?.....No.Santi253 wrote:Gross.Kim OHara wrote: She comes back as chicken nuggets?
Kim
chownah
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_slime
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mechanica ... rated_meat
Non-violence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice. - Mahatma Gandhi
http://www.matthewsatori.tumblr.com
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Re: the great vegetarian debate
Pink slime??
Yeah, another reason for vegetarianism - but may be, more logically, a reason for avoiding processed food. I mean, corn flakes could be made of the vegetable equivalent of pink slime and we wouldn't even know. As for that weird 'textured vegetable protein' sold to vegetarians as a meat substitute ... no, don't think about it. Really don't think about it.
And whatever you do, don't watch Soylent Green.
Kim
Yeah, another reason for vegetarianism - but may be, more logically, a reason for avoiding processed food. I mean, corn flakes could be made of the vegetable equivalent of pink slime and we wouldn't even know. As for that weird 'textured vegetable protein' sold to vegetarians as a meat substitute ... no, don't think about it. Really don't think about it.
And whatever you do, don't watch Soylent Green.
Kim
Re: the great vegetarian debate
I don't know......sweetened pink slime poured over shaved ice sounds like a great summertime refresher!!!
chownah
chownah
Re: the great vegetarian debate
I have been a vegetarian for thirty years now. Health-wise, my body/mind has overcome cancer and advanced cirrhosis (non-alcoholic). Spiritually, my heart is content and at peace.
It was exactly the fifth precept of Buddhism that drew me into the three refuges. Nothing spoke to me as warmly and lovingly as this precept...and I doubt that I will ever find such welcoming acceptance of a "harm not" worldview in any other path.
I have chickens and eat their nourishing, non-fertilized eggs. They live out their natural lives here free "as birds". They are loved for themselves and for their gifts of eggs. I have no desire for fish, dairy or chicken meat, which some vegetarians will include in their diets.
I have always found plenty to eat in a social setting...barbeques usually have buns and some type of salad offered. More than sufficient. I've found that when invited to such things and it becomes known that I am a vegetarian two camps will spring up: people who are "worried" that I haven't got enough to eat, and people who will defend meat-eating even if opinions are unsolicited.
I understand that if I ordained I could choose to not eat meat if put into my alms bowl and give the offering to another. This is what I would choose to do.
It was exactly the fifth precept of Buddhism that drew me into the three refuges. Nothing spoke to me as warmly and lovingly as this precept...and I doubt that I will ever find such welcoming acceptance of a "harm not" worldview in any other path.
I have chickens and eat their nourishing, non-fertilized eggs. They live out their natural lives here free "as birds". They are loved for themselves and for their gifts of eggs. I have no desire for fish, dairy or chicken meat, which some vegetarians will include in their diets.
I have always found plenty to eat in a social setting...barbeques usually have buns and some type of salad offered. More than sufficient. I've found that when invited to such things and it becomes known that I am a vegetarian two camps will spring up: people who are "worried" that I haven't got enough to eat, and people who will defend meat-eating even if opinions are unsolicited.
I understand that if I ordained I could choose to not eat meat if put into my alms bowl and give the offering to another. This is what I would choose to do.
Be a lamp unto yourself.
Re: the great vegetarian debate
Are corn flakes and veggie burgers sprayed with bleach or other toxic chemicals, due to being so riddled with disease?Kim OHara wrote:Pink slime??
As for that weird 'textured vegetable protein' sold to vegetarians as a meat substitute ... no, don't think about it.
Helena Bottemiller of Food Safety News dug up this United Stated Department of Agriculture document [PDF], which lists dozens of chemicals that processors can apply to meat without any labeling requirement. Things like calcium hypochlorite (also used to bleach cotton and clean swimming pools), hypobromous acid (also used as a germicide in hot tubs), DBDMH (or 1,3-dibromo-5,5-dimethylhydantoin, which is also used in water treatment), and chlorine dioxide (also used to bleach wood pulp), to name just a few.
http://grist.org/factory-farms/pink-sli ... rial-meat/
Pink slime is also made from spraying scalding hot water to remove the most undesirable parts of an animal possible, if I'm not mistaken.The dirt: Even a little ground chuck can make you upchuck. When USDA inspectors last tested hamburger meat, they looked at 563 sources nationwide and discovered Clostridium perfringens in 53 percent of the batches, Staphylococcus in 30 percent, and Listeria monocytogenes in 12 percent. Interestingly, the USDA found no trace of Escherichia coli 0157:H7, a.k.a. E. coli, one of the desperadoes of foodborne illness. Despite this finding, if slaughterhouse safeguards fail (and they sometimes do), E. coli could potentially pop up in your next patty.
At the supermarket: Choose ground cow that's been nuked. "Find a grocery store that sells irradiated ground beef," says Donald W. Schaffner, Ph.D., an extension specialist in food science at Rutgers University. The package will bear the words "treated by irradiation." Schaffner gives the safety of the treatment a glowing review: "The amount of induced radioactivity is 200,000 times smaller than the level of radioactivity naturally present in all foods."
http://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/10- ... ure-eating
Last edited by Santi253 on Sun Aug 20, 2017 4:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Non-violence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice. - Mahatma Gandhi
http://www.matthewsatori.tumblr.com
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Re: the great vegetarian debate
Thank you for sharing this. It's much easier to be vegetarian than people often make it out to be.FallAway wrote: I have always found plenty to eat in a social setting...
Non-violence is the greatest virtue, cowardice the greatest vice. - Mahatma Gandhi
http://www.matthewsatori.tumblr.com
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Re: the great vegetarian debate
FallAway wrote:I have been a vegetarian for thirty years now. Health-wise, my body/mind has overcome cancer and advanced cirrhosis (non-alcoholic). Spiritually, my heart is content and at peace. It was exactly the fifth precept of Buddhism that drew me into the three refuges. Nothing spoke to me as warmly and lovingly as this precept...
Congratulations on all counts.
I don't want to encourage to you to leave your happy spiritual home but I have just been looking up diet and religion for another small project and there are two other groups which take non-harm as their primary goal - the Jains and the Vegans.and I doubt that I will ever find such welcoming acceptance of a "harm not" worldview in any other path.
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jain_vegetarianism says
Veganism is not considered a religion but is often considered a lifestyle rather than a dietary choice. The Vegan Society https://www.vegansociety.com/go-vegan/d ... n-veganism defines its basis as:Jain objections to the eating of meat, fish and eggs are based on the principle of non-violence (ahimsa, figuratively "non-injuring"). Every act by which a person directly or indirectly supports killing or injury is seen as act of violence (himsa), which creates harmful reaction karma. The aim of ahimsa is to prevent the accumulation of such karma.[2][3] The extent to which this intention is put into effect varies greatly among Hindus, Buddhists and Jains. Jains believe nonviolence is the most essential religious duty for everyone (ahinsā paramo dharmaḥ, a statement often inscribed on Jain temples).[4][5][6] It is an indispensable condition for liberation from the cycle of reincarnation,[7] which is the ultimate goal of all Jain activities. Jains share this goal with Hindus and Buddhists, but their approach is particularly rigorous and comprehensive. Their scrupulous and thorough way of applying nonviolence to everyday activities, and especially to food, shapes their entire lives and is the most significant hallmark of Jain identity.
A philosophy and way of living which seeks to exclude—as far as is possible and practicable—all forms of exploitation of, and cruelty to, animals for food, clothing or any other purpose; and by extension, promotes the development and use of animal-free alternatives for the benefit of humans, animals and the environment. In dietary terms it denotes the practice of dispensing with all products derived wholly or partly from animals.
Kim
Re: the great vegetarian debate
I apologize for an error in this post. It is the first precept and not the fifth that I wished to say. I'm sorry for the confusion this may have caused.FallAway wrote:It was exactly the fifth precept of Buddhism that drew me into the three refuges. Nothing spoke to me as warmly and lovingly as this precept...and I doubt that I will ever find such welcoming acceptance of a "harm not" worldview in any other path.
Thank you Kim for your response and your well-wishes. I respect Jainism highly and have read about that religion in an interested way. I think my viewpoint about eating chicken eggs would differ. I don't consider this a violence to the creature, particularly in my own case. There may be grounds for exploitation, I concede, but to me it is the same kind of exploitation I "subject" my son to when I "use" his strong arms for physical work, rather than my own weaker ones.Kim Ohara wrote:I don't want to encourage to you to leave your happy spiritual home but I have just been looking up diet and religion for another small project and there are two other groups which take non-harm as their primary goal - the Jains and the Vegans.
Hens will lay eggs regardless if the eggs are fertilized or not, or are eaten or not. Mature hens will usually lay one egg a day until post-maturation. This is similar to how a human female will ovulate monthly regardless of fertilization of the ovum.
I believe that the companionship - not husbandry - of chickens is not wrong or evil. Inhumane treatment of the chicken such as happens in commercializing their value is indeed wrong. I don't see the evil in caring for a freely-moving, well-nourished chicken who will live out a natural life span (approximately 8-10 years) and enjoying the food their bodies will create regardless of "ownership" or not. So I think this viewpoint would create a obstacle with Jainism.
I am not so very familiar with what a vegan "lifestyle" would entail. I am not opposed to their ethical viewpoint at all, but I suspect that it would be difficult for me to obtain, or grow, the allowable food. I gave up leathers at the same time as I became vegetarian. Never purchased, wore, or will wear fur or feathers for the inherent cruelty. I know that I love sprouts of all kind. I may be partially on the road to veganism already...
Thank you for sharing the information. Blessings to you and a peaceful life.
Be a lamp unto yourself.
Re: the great vegetarian debate
FallAway wrote:
I am not so very familiar with what a vegan "lifestyle" would entail.
It basically entails a lifestyle that just makes every attempt, within reason, to not consume things or do things that harm animals. For example, only plant food diet, no flesh, no dairy, no eggs. No food with animal based ingredients. No leather clothes or products, no silk, no wool. No purchasing of products tested on animals. No purchasing of pets, only rescue adoptions if one wants a pet. No killing rat traps, only live catch. Stuff like that. It's not as strict as Jain, but it's a perfect fit with Buddhist non-harming. Some vegans have a problem with "backyard eggs", some don't as long as the animals are not treated like commodities.