yut wrote:This issue is a veritable powder-keg (said in a Southern accent).
The oil-peak -> local produce only is not my original argument. There is quite a community of theorists who argue that the oil peak is going to cause severe food shortages, as well as shortages of manufactured goods. Most people feel oil makes gas which runs cars... When we run out of oil, we'll just drive electric cars like Ed Bagley Jr.
No. Oil is necessary for pretty much everything, including shipping veggies around the world. It is the most essential resource, next to air, water, and sunlight.
Geologists have been talking about the oil peak for 20 years. We've already hit peak supply. Demand will continue to increase, but supply will decrease. This amounts to very high costs for anything that uses oil -- which is EVERYTHING.
Google "oil peak".
How will vegetarianism work for people who live in cold climates, deserts, etc, when oil is $90+ a barrel? We're going to ship watery vegetables everywhere? Even as it stands now, a pound of chicken breast is cheaper than a pound of tomatoes (and you get like one tomato per pound).
As far as anecdotal evidence, such as: I was a vegetarian for x years and I never get sick since I switched.
Scientific evidence does not support this. When health care providers (that make more money from keeping people healthy) start proposing vegetarianism, let me know.
Additionally, this switch in diet probably was for health reasons. You probably cut out a lot of junk food, but I could be wrong. I have a feeling if you ate healthier, but included a nutritionally advisable amount of meat in your diet, you would be just as healthy... even healthier. Limiting the amino-acid building blocks that your body can use doesn't amount to healthy living.
But anyway, vegetarianism is a luxury of the modern world, soon to be a thing of the past... Deal.
Wow, yut, you are the dumbest motherfucker I think I have seen on this board. Your argument is so skewed and scientifically retarded that you have left me speechless.