tgoddess wrote:
Jim,
Maybe Santa will bring you one of these this year.(I already have mine on order.)
http://www.zazzle.com/meat_is_murder_tasty_murder_apron-154565039261278363
teatpuller wrote:
Acute acidosis can occur very quickly and results in all kind of problems including death. I'm sure the goal is to feed as much corn as possible without pushing it too far. And if you never have acidosis problems you probably aren't pushing it far enough to make money.
This isn't a pretty picture but by in large these animals are not in misery. The whole system could be adjusted to make the animals' lives quite a bit more pleasant, but people aren't going to pay 5 cent/lb more for a slightlier happy cow.
lemoneater wrote:teatpuller wrote:
Acute acidosis can occur very quickly and results in all kind of problems including death. I'm sure the goal is to feed as much corn as possible without pushing it too far. And if you never have acidosis problems you probably aren't pushing it far enough to make money.
This isn't a pretty picture but by in large these animals are not in misery. The whole system could be adjusted to make the animals' lives quite a bit more pleasant, but people aren't going to pay 5 cent/lb more for a slightlier happy cow.
It seems like the growing alternative meat market (like the organic free range turkeys that are $2 - $3/lb that still sell out at the store) is proof that some people are willing to pay more, for whatever reason motivates them - happiness/ environment/ food safety/ taste... If people replace meat in some meals with less expensive food like beans, no one needs to go hungry over it either.
jtobin625 wrote:Where do you find organic free range turkey's for $2 to 3/lb? Call me uninformed but to me that sounds like an absolute steal. So great that even the poor, who usually get left out of these debates, could afford this.
jtobin625 wrote:Where do you find organic free range turkey's for $2 to 3/lb? Call me uninformed but to me that sounds like an absolute steal. So great that even the poor, who usually get left out of these debates, could afford this.
jimswside wrote:teatpuller wrote:
Do you think mushrooms suffer?
Im sure someone will, or has already written a book that thinks they do.![]()
auxen1 wrote:Ammonia is already in all of the meat you are eating. It is produced naturally whether in the pre ground industrial product or the uber organic home ground made it yourself product.
tortminder wrote:All restrictive diets carry a risk of nutritional deficiency and, unless embarked upon for sound medical reasons, are best avoided.
The Beef Products’ study that won U.S.D.A. approval used an ammonia treatment that raised the pH of the meat to as high as 10, an alkalinity well beyond the range of most foods."
auxen1 wrote:The Beef Products’ study that won U.S.D.A. approval used an ammonia treatment that raised the pH of the meat to as high as 10, an alkalinity well beyond the range of most foods."
but still less than peanut butter and american cheese
in the interest of balanced reporting
auxen1 wrote:do you eat blue cheese?
auxen1 wrote:not if it's going to get in the way of your reporting
tortminder wrote:jimswside wrote:teatpuller wrote:
Do you think mushrooms suffer?
Im sure someone will, or has already written a book that thinks they do.![]()
Jim;
To paraphrase a comic from the 60's; "You are what you eat" said a wise old man. "Lord, if that's true, I'm a garbage can."
The main argument on this thread strikes me as somewhat elitist. Clearly, if ' how you eat, so you become ', the anti-meat crowd subsists on a diet of fruitcake, nuts and crackers… But those that posit a moral "high ground" position vis-a-vis carnivores typify with - let's face it - awe-inspiring ignorance the inexplicably persuasive thought patterns that guide many a claimant to culinary moral superiority.
Rats are omnivores. We, like rats, are subject to a phenomenon known as sensory specific satiety , the name given to our tendency to quickly tire of any food that is eaten on its own. Researchers have found that simply by injecting rats' food with a variety of flavors, the rats would eat from two to three times as much of the same food as rats given the same food containing only one flavor. If our evolution teaches us anything about what an omnivore should eat it is only that we should consume a broad range of foodstuffs to prevent our diets becoming deficient in important vitamins, minerals or sources of protein.
All restrictive diets carry a risk of nutritional deficiency and, unless embarked upon for sound medical reasons, are best avoided. And all cults, meanwhile, carry a risk of terminal mind-rot and are best avoided, with or without sound medical opinion.
My two cents... your mileage may vary.
tortminder wrote:
All restrictive diets carry a risk of nutritional deficiency and, unless embarked upon for sound medical reasons, are best avoided.
auxen1 wrote:Kenny,
I think you're right on all accounts.
An underlying thread, though, is that this seems to be a product "recovered" from waste. If not for this highly technologicaly-dependant process (I went to the company's website) the scraps would go for other uses like animal food.
They are able to pull tens of millions of pounds of low fat beef out of fat trimmings? And the demand/need exists for this product?
Perhaps Foer should get a little more respect.
David Hammond wrote:Foer and Bourdain, Cliff Notes version as provided by Grub Street: http://newyork.grubstreet.com/2010/03/b ... _foer.html
Bourdain: “Generations of people slaughtered themselves and fought wars for salt for a reason — because it’s good.”