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Does humanity need to reduce meat consumption?

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
I prefer evolution to revolution.
A way to mitigate deleterious effects of
meat eating is to alter the ration of kinds
of meat produced.
Eat more bacon & eggs!
Though I do see the PETA types advocating against factory farms they do appear to be more AGW friendly than traditional beef farming. You appear to have a valid point here (shh, don't tell anyone that I said so).
 

We Never Know

No Slack
I prefer evolution to revolution.
A way to mitigate deleterious effects of
meat eating is to alter the ration of kinds
of meat produced.
Eat more bacon & eggs!

IMG_20230721_141958.jpg
 

Revoltingest

Pragmatic Libertarian
Premium Member
It could be sustainable with less than 2 billion people.
Population control is an anathema to so many
societies (Eugenics! God's will!) that it won't be
controlled by many countries until it reaches the
point that it's desperately compelling....& not
merely the Anthropocene Mass Extinction.
 

Heyo

Veteran Member
I doubt that it's sustainable even then.

How do you propose we reduce the world's population to below that level and keep it there?
That would require multiple measures on a global scale. That's extremely difficult but we already have examples of international treaties that were successful, the Montreal Protocol, International Opium Convention.
1. International carbon tax and tariffs. One (small) part of that would be that a person has a tax free amount of CO2 they may produce. Stick that to a fixed date (I prefer 1945) and make it inheritable. I.e. the number of siblings you have determines how much CO2 you can produce tax free.
2. Help developing nations with education and production and distribution of contraceptives.
3. Help developing nations reach a standard of living and security where people naturally prefer small families.
4. Kick out all Catholic missionaries.
 

Yerda

Veteran Member
"The research shows that a big meat-eater's diet produces an average of 10.24 kg of planet-warming greenhouse gasses each day.
...
The analysis is the first to look at the detailed impact of diets on other environmental measures all together. These are land use, water use, water pollution and loss of species, usually caused by loss of habitat because of expansion of farming. In all cases high meat-eaters had a significantly higher adverse impact than other groups."

- Eating less meat 'like taking 8m cars off road'

The case for the need to reduce overall meat consumption seems clear cut to me. Unfortunately, it's currently increasing...

How say you? (Don't bother replying if you're a conspiracy theorist).
I din't believe I can change anyone's mind but I think humanity should reduce meat eating to (roughly) zero. I don't think the practice of raising billions of animals (mostly in conditions that are frankly evil) to feed people is sustainable. Too much land, too much water, too much carbon feeding animals to feed people.
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
We don't need to do that at all. Eating meat is not inherently more deleterious to the environment than not eating meat. It is just a question of how each is done.
I think ot has more to do with the costs and resources required for raising livestock than the act of consumption.

Fields, grain, water, housing etc.
 

Secret Chief

Very strong language
I din't believe I can change anyone's mind but I think humanity should reduce meat eating to (roughly) zero. I don't think the practice of raising billions of animals (mostly in conditions that are frankly evil) to feed people is sustainable. Too much land, too much water, too much carbon feeding animals to feed people.
You're right it's not sustainable, and Nature will redress.
 

Mock Turtle

Oh my, did I say that!
Premium Member

Shaul

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
I think ot has more to do with the costs and resources required for raising livestock than the act of consumption.

Fields, grain, water, housing etc.
Again it is a matter of how it is done. Meat production does not innately require more cost and resources than producing produce. Consider an extreme, perhaps ludicrous, example; hunting, fishing or eating eggs produced from free range self feeding chickens have low costs and resource usages compared to produce farmed on land stripped through "cut and slash" and transported via jets to far away markets. Obviously a abnormal example, but it serves the purpose of pointing out the it is just a matter of how each is done that is the key factor.
 

Hermit Philosopher

Selflessly here for you
"The research shows that a big meat-eater's diet produces an average of 10.24 kg of planet-warming greenhouse gasses each day.
...
The analysis is the first to look at the detailed impact of diets on other environmental measures all together. These are land use, water use, water pollution and loss of species, usually caused by loss of habitat because of expansion of farming. In all cases high meat-eaters had a significantly higher adverse impact than other groups."

- Eating less meat 'like taking 8m cars off road'

The case for the need to reduce overall meat consumption seems clear cut to me. Unfortunately, it's currently increasing...

How say you? (Don't bother replying if you're a conspiracy theorist).
In my view, all greed (including the over-consumption of meat) leads to imbalance and is unsustainable in all sorts of ways.

Humbly,
Hermit
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Again it is a matter of how it is done. Meat production does not innately require more cost and resources than producing produce. Consider an extreme, perhaps ludicrous, example; hunting, fishing or eating eggs produced from free range self feeding chickens have low costs and resource usages compared to produce farmed on land stripped through "cut and slash" and transported via jets to far away markets. Obviously a abnormal example, but it serves the purpose of pointing out the it is just a matter of how each is done that is the key factor.
It's a reason I think ulture meats have a future.

Those fields and pastures can be used more for human benefit than sustaining mass populations of livestock.
 

metis

aged ecumenical anthropologist
I had to make changes in my previous post, so I corrected it as it was supposed to be punny.
 

Alien826

No religious beliefs
Almost none of what has been written in this thread matters much. Climate change is here to stay, because nobody is going to do anything about it on a large enough scale. It's got to the stage where what is needed is so drastic that it's going to hurt a lot, and those that could do something (our rulers) are either those with the most to lose or controlled by them.

Oh, I think we should keep trying, might as well go down bravely, but realistically all that's left is mitigation of the effects, and that may not be enough avoid the extinction of most of our race, and half the other creatures that have the misfortune to share this planet with us.

It would be easy to say "it serves us right", but the blame lies with only a small section of us, so it's all rather sad.
 

George-ananda

Advaita Vedanta, Theosophy, Spiritualism
Premium Member
"The research shows that a big meat-eater's diet produces an average of 10.24 kg of planet-warming greenhouse gasses each day.
...
The analysis is the first to look at the detailed impact of diets on other environmental measures all together. These are land use, water use, water pollution and loss of species, usually caused by loss of habitat because of expansion of farming. In all cases high meat-eaters had a significantly higher adverse impact than other groups."

- Eating less meat 'like taking 8m cars off road'

The case for the need to reduce overall meat consumption seems clear cut to me. Unfortunately, it's currently increasing...

How say you? (Don't bother replying if you're a conspiracy theorist).
Interesting timing as I just watched a few videos extolling the virtues of a carnivore diet which is basically eating only animal products. It touts claim after claim on the health and weight loss benefits of such a diet. Carbohydrates are said to absolutely be the villain in our diets. This diet is essentially zero carbs!!

Now, on the other hand I believe we should all be sympathetic to the health of the earth and that includes reducing greenhouse gases to a minimum.

Furthermore, there is also the issue of violence and mistreatment of animals.

A dilemma can occur if there is a tradeoff between individual human health and the environment. Hopefully science can help us here? Lab grown meat??
 
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