Mhays wrote:aschie30 wrote:I mean, we can emphathize with and understand the atrocity and violence in the Holocaust without having witnessed it, right? (Almost a Hitler reference for you.)
Have you been to any of the museum exhibits covering the Holocaust in the area?
I've been to Auschwitz.
Mhays wrote:I think it's up to the parent what their kid can and cannot handle - Sparky watched most of Mike G's video about the Mulefoots, (and the cooking of the head into testa) I explained about the slaughtering part and he asked not to see it, which I respected.
I agree, and have said as much above.
Mhays wrote:Speaking as a parent who's struggled with this issue, I can understand that this must have been difficult for Monica to do, and I appreciate her sharing it with us - and I'm sorry that it's turning into a circus. I've had (meat-eating) parents react negatively to me simply because I took Sparky to the Lake County fair and then the pig roast in Mundelein - but they aren't raising my kid, and I'm not raising theirs.
True and true, but nobody's talking about a pig roast or about a fair where the otherwise healthy animals will eventually end up slaughtered (off-site). Whether you allow your kid to witness a slaughter depends upon a lot of things, and it's not something that I think all parents should do as an initiation ritual to eating meat. At the same time, I understand how a non-foodie, who has not been privy to the multitude of "where does our food come from" conversations that we have, would interpret her article that way, just based upon how it read (i.e., "you love bacon, now you need to know where it came from"). (Of course, I didn't read Eng's article that way, but I'm "on the inside" of these discussions, so to speak, so I'm trying to understand the perspective of someone who's not so food-engrossed & how they would take this article.) I don't hold it against parents who want to educate their kids, but at the same time, I don't begrudge parents who think it's too graphic for their kids to witness either.
A somewhat-tangential anecdote: My friend, who is really NOT a foodie, does not think about food, its provenance, happily shops at Jewel Meat, etc., took his young boys on a fishing charter in Lake Michigan. When the fish captain asked if he could take their catch and gut it, his oldest (about 8 years old), started freaking out. He had to have an impromptu talk with his kid about where his food came from, but that it never occurred to him prior to this trip that he would have to explain this to his kid, shows how far off the mental radar the process of catch-kill-gut is for most people.