hotfire wrote:are you asking if real indians have a sacred relationship like the misidentified indians have with the bison?
No, he asked if Hindus do.
Moderator: Community Team
hotfire wrote:are you asking if real indians have a sacred relationship like the misidentified indians have with the bison?
mookiemcgee wrote:Do the Hindu's have a stated position on the holiness of Bison?
tzor wrote:mookiemcgee wrote:Do the Hindu's have a stated position on the holiness of Bison?
I don't know for sure because I don't have an authoritative answer in front of me. I recall some personal conversations from Hindus which suggested that they did not. In all honesty, I have never told any bison about that.
Dukasaur wrote: That was the night I broke into St. Mike's Cathedral and shat on the Archibishop's desk
jimboston wrote:I probably have two meals with meat each day... some days maybe 3 meals, once in awhile 1 meal... rarely do I have a day with no meat, but it does happen occasionally. I think if you averaged it out it’d be something like 1.8 meals per day.
jimboston wrote:Now when I say meat, it could be beef, chicken, pork... and it could be in the form of fresh meat, cold cuts, sausage/smoked meat, etc. I honestly don’t keep track.
To my tastes, there’s nothing better than a nice grilled Ribeye with some grilled veggies and some starch (maybe potatoes or rice or a nice baguette).
That said, I know my ‘diet’ is not good... it’s not good for my health, and it’s not environmentally friendly.
I like the taste of my meat, and my society makes it easy... it’s not super expensive (relative to my income and other expenses), and it’s easy to obtain.
If there were some ‘carbon’ tax promoted that made meat more expensive then I would probably reduce my intake. It would help if I couldn’t walk into generic chain ‘steak-house’ and get a plate full of marinated tips for under $10. Maybe restaurants would get more creative with better mixed dishes (like asian stir-fry)... where there is some meat, but more rice or vegetables. These can be tasty and filling and nutritious...if cooked properly. As a young man working in a supermarket I thought Tofu was gross looking... but my mother-in-law used to prepare stir-fry dishes that had beef or pork and tofu... and she could cook it so you never even realized half your protein was from Tofu. Unfortunately as she’s aged she’s lost the ability to cook properly, and if you don’t time the stir-fry right it gets soggy and gross.
Like many of these problems with the environment I’m willing to pay-to-play... but business fights these proposals. It’s also likely that people with money will continue to buy 20oz Ribeyes and lower income people will wind up having low-protein diets. These issues can be addressed with taxes, but obviously there’s a point where people resist. Socialism only works to a point, because it’s been demonstrated that people abuse the system. In smaller groups and in the past we felt it was ok to shame people who abused the social safety net... but now that’s called ‘classism’. There is a balance, but people don’t seem to want to work towards this... and our political system is not designed to move slowly to test solutions. Our policies and rhetoric swing from extreme to extreme.... and the system seems designed to appeal to the loudest people on the ends of the spectrum, ignoring the mass in the middle.
Kinda like this forum.
I’m sad now... and a little tipsy.
Goodnight.
nietzsche wrote:you're a douche Symmetry
Symmetry wrote:
Oh dear, this is gonna be a long rambling post about what he eats, isn't it?
Yup
nietzsche wrote:mrs pang thinks having no balls is fine.
The genetic mutation to process lactose is just that: a mutation—not an ideal, or even the norm. The true outliers are not those with lactose intolerance, but lactase persistence, as it's known to researchers.
Recent breakthroughs in genetics challenge the idea that humans have long held the ability to process lactose in fresh milk. These studies suggest the mutation only took hold among Northern European dairy farmers some 3,000 years ago, most likely out of dire need, since the climate wasn't conducive to growing much else.
mrswdk wrote:People in OT who are killing the planet and also have BO:
mrswdk wrote:People in OT who have renounced the demon beef:
mrswdk
saxitoxin
Dukasaur
People in OT who are killing the planet and also have BO:
nietzsche
mrswdk wrote:People in OT who have renounced the demon beef:
mrswdk
saxitoxin
Dukasaur
People in OT who are killing the planet and also have BO:
nietzsche
nietzsche wrote:mrswdk wrote:People in OT who have renounced the demon beef:
mrswdk
saxitoxin
Dukasaur
People in OT who are killing the planet and also have BO:
nietzsche
my body is a rock thanks to the protein i eat. and the my main source of protein? yes, beef.
it's up to you if you want to be a blob.
say yes to beef.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users