I'm an omnivore. I like eating all sorts of meat, and when I don't, I certainly feel the effects of not getting proper nutrients (I guess I don't eat enough peanut butter/soy type things).
That is kind of an odd thing to say. I guess from my point of view you are admitting that meat is the base of your diet (not a bad thing) and that you get no other nutrients from other food (kinda is a bad thing). Nuts, soy, tofu, fruits and veggies should really be a huge part of an omnivore's diet (ok- maybe not tofu so much... or soy. just because meat eaters tend to avoid those). Anyways, when you stop eating meat for a little bit and get malnourished, it probably means you are not eating correctly while eating meat. Does this make any sense or am I just offending you? 😳 I bring this up because I hear a lot of people say things along the lines of 'I never eat veggies...' and when they ask me what I eat regularly people seem 'weirded out' that I actually consume a lot of fruits and veggies. Since the tiny top of the food pyramid is meat and that is what many people eat most of, that concerns me. Again, sorry if this doesn't make sense or is offensive.
For you veggie people, are your significant others also veggie? If you don't have an SO yet, would you dateget serious with a omnivore? Just curious.
My hubby is also a veggie and I don't think I could be with someone who eats meat. Is is SOOO nice not to have any meat in our house ever! (minus the dry cat food.. but it's salmon 😉)



why do some vegans eat fish and eggs?
This site does some compliations of scientific papers comparing grassfed/pasture raised animals with grain fed/confinement type housing:
http://www.eatwild.com/healthbenefits.htm
I am always amazed that vegetarians are able to go through the required slaughterhouse visits to be a vet in the UK. Even more amazed with the vegans.
Sorry, I'm coming from this from a evolutionary perspective, not necessarily an animal science or biochemical or medical or whatever perspective.
I used to have a pet rabbit when I was 15 or 16. Muemmel lived in a cage in the garden and I took care of him every morning before I went to school. One day I came home, went into the house through the garage and there I saw Muemmel dead, without fur, hanging from the ceiling. Totally traumatized I walked into my room. The following Sunday he was cooked for Sunday lunch. As Muemmel was cooking in the oven I had to make potato dumplings. Breathing was hard because the entire house smelled like cooked rabbit. My stepfather thought it was hilarious about how upset I got that he killed my rabbit. He even placed the head of my cooked rabbit on his place such that it faced me while having lunch. That's when I became a vegetarian.🙁😡
Rexosaurus brought up an interesting point - I don't do foie gras either, and won't eat veal because of the pens, or lamb because they're so young (yes, I'm aware that chickens and other animals are young when they are sent to slaughter, but they're not *that* young as far as I know).
Rexosaurus brought up an interesting point - I don't do foie gras either, and won't eat veal because of the pens, or lamb because they're so young (yes, I'm aware that chickens and other animals are young when they are sent to slaughter, but they're not *that* young as far as I know).
Rexosaurus brought up an interesting point - I don't do foie gras either, and won't eat veal because of the pens, or lamb because they're so young (yes, I'm aware that chickens and other animals are young when they are sent to slaughter, but they're not *that* young as far as I know).
My SO is veggie too, and I like not having meat in the house. I guess I'm a slightly atypical veggie -- I LOVE LOVE LOVE the taste of meat. Sausages with mustard? Yum? Big ole juicy bacon double cheeseburger? Yum! I really miss these foods occasionally, but fortunately there is great veggie sausage (Gimme lean is good for my periodic sausage cravings) and lots of other wonderful veggie food and, well, this will sound incredibly corny, I think of vegetarianism as one small way of limiting the amount of suffering* in the world, 'cause there sure is a lot these days. Also, several members of my family had heart disease. One more "also" - dried beans are a heckuva lot cheaper than steak!
* There are some decent meat options these days -- other than the act of slaughter, truly free-range animals live pretty good lives for the most part
I was amazed that the vegetarians/vegans at our undergrad made it through meat science class😱
As for me I am an omnivore. I usually eat mostly chicken, but do eat red meat/pork sometimes also.
Rexosaurus brought up an interesting point - I don't do foie gras either, and won't eat veal because of the pens, or lamb because they're so young (yes, I'm aware that chickens and other animals are young when they are sent to slaughter, but they're not *that* young as far as I know).
Do you guys have many faux-meats in the US? I love Chinese-vegetarian-mock meats especially, eg Vegetarian Sweet and Sour Pork and Vegetarian Lemon chicken and Vegetarian Rosted Mock Duck, etc
i do, however, have a problem with vegetarians who don't eat meat because "its inhumane and awful" and yet they eat eggs. WHEN BATTERY CAGE CHICKENS ARE ARGUABLY THE WORST-TREATED OF THEM ALL. grr. that one really annoys me.
All these sentiments amuse me, we vegetarians aren't somehow made delicate and unable to cope with things, eg we obviously get through dissection classes etc.
I spent a week at a pig abattoir and it was fine. I was quite impressed in fact, it was all very humane............
that is one of the most twisted things i have ever heard!
out of total curiosity, how did he kill it?
OK, here's a question that I've been trying to find an answer to for a while now. Everyone is down on corn in diets (I'm not talking about household pets here, or other carnivores; I'm talking about cattle and people, mostly). This is also a huge theme in "The Omnivores Dilemma." But what I can't seem to figure out is why corn is "bad."
I think you missunderstand. This was not a slaughter type situation. This was meat science. In the lab we basically took the carcasses and cut them down to retail size. The class portion talked about slaughter, USDA inspection, grading, meat quality...The lab portion is what I was referring to.

I used to have a pet rabbit when I was 15 or 16. Muemmel lived in a cage in the garden and I took care of him every morning before I went to school. One day I came home, went into the house through the garage and there I saw Muemmel dead, without fur, hanging from the ceiling. Totally traumatized I walked into my room. The following Sunday he was cooked for Sunday lunch. As Muemmel was cooking in the oven I had to make potato dumplings. Breathing was hard because the entire house smelled like cooked rabbit. My stepfather thought it was hilarious about how upset I got that he killed my rabbit. He even placed the head of my cooked rabbit on his place such that it faced me while having lunch. That's when I became a vegetarian.🙁😡
One thing that is challenging is that the veterinary profession NEEDS there to be meat eaters. Think about the large animal vets. If the whole world became vegetarian or vegan there would be a loss of jobs for the large animal vets.