Answer for question 4248.
Feb. 20th, 2015 02:21 pm[Error: unknown template qotd]Personally, I don't get vaccinations because the flu shot contains mercury and things that don't make sense. I know I've probably been spared numerous cases of preventable childhood diseases thanks to vaccines, but at this stage in my life, I'm willing to wing it.
A woman downstairs from me has never had her teenage daughter vaccinated, but apparently doesn't understand the reason her daughter has never been sick is that she's protected by other people's immunizations.
I can't say more than this here because several years ago I was kicked out of an LJ forum for stating my views on vaccines—the forum wasn't about vaccination, per se—and since then I've been extremely cautious as to what kind of opinions I express here.
A woman downstairs from me has never had her teenage daughter vaccinated, but apparently doesn't understand the reason her daughter has never been sick is that she's protected by other people's immunizations.
I can't say more than this here because several years ago I was kicked out of an LJ forum for stating my views on vaccines—the forum wasn't about vaccination, per se—and since then I've been extremely cautious as to what kind of opinions I express here.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 03:57 am (UTC)I don't have to tell YOU how insanely inefficient it is to raise animals for meat. However, I think that, so long as meat-animals are seen as a special-occasion luxury, consumed no more than a couple times a week, or on special occasions, we can afford to have that be part of our world.
However, it's also true that some people find themselves responding well to high-animal-protein diets. Not everybody, of course, but it IS a thing that happens. And I think that it should be possible to create a meat substitute which is digested and metabolized like meat, but which doesn't take much more energy to create than plants do.
I expect that that substitute will be rather bland and simplistic, with a fairly boring texture -- but that it will be better quality "meat" than what is served in fast food and mass-production settings. Our McNuggets and Chef Boyardee meatballs will be created in a process that doesn't actually involve any animals.
A steak, on the other hand, or a roast goose, or other flavorful meat, will have to involve animals. Actually replicating all the variables which go into a real animal will be beyond our skills for generations, I think (although that's not the same as "never"). But because steaks and things like that are basically luxury items -- I tend to only eat them on special occasions, anyway -- I think that most of those eight billion people would be willing to have them be a "sometimes food", as Cookie Monster has started to say, and, with that, I hope and expect that it should be possible to manage it.
What I think is absolutely clear, and I suspect you would agree, is that factory farming has no long-term place in a sustainable world. It worked okay to feed four or five billion people, but it's reached its limits, and, from here, we have to either give up meat as a primary source of calories, or come up with some way of creating meat without animals.