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New Depends on how you calculate waste
One of the biggest environmental pollutants is methane. Our cows fart too much. So you have a choice, you can (a) allow people to go hungry, (b) have a lot of farting cows, (c) get people to eat a diet rich in vegetables and other good stuff. You probably pick (c), good for you.

Now, how will you be generating the crops? Do you (a) get farmers to produce more by giving them more fertilizer (cows make good fertilizer), (b) get a lot more farmers to produce a lot more stuff, but in enviromentally sound ways even if they have to use all available space and cut down the trees to do it, (c) make genetically engineered crops that do not rape the soil of nutrients and don't need no stinkin' pesticides. Who knows what you'll pick, I'll pick (c) for you because you are probably environmentally sound (if not otherwise so...snicker) and you don't want no stinkin' fertilizer causing algae growths in your mostquito pond.

You'll be wanting some real good science to produce those genetic marvels, even if you breed them the old fashioned way. Now produce an economy that will allow you the freedom produce the eggheads that produce the science years before it is needed.

And please do it in an environmentally sound way too. No coal fired power plants to produce the electricity, you'll be wanting to use solar. Of course, you'll need to produce the solar cells, produce them in an environmentally friendly way too, I won't allow you any backsliding. Your scientists will need to commute to the labs, give'em bikes. Oh, and produce those being conscious of the environment too.

The point, Ashton, is that you want a perfect world to spring from a perfect world. It won't. You have a dirty world and the "economy" is nothing more than people doing what they do. From that, you must produce enough food, clothing, and science to keep'em all happy. I contend you haven't the faintest of fuzzies on how to make that work, and neither do all the other "anti-consumers" who somehow thinks this stuff grows on trees. By the way, China has 5 billion people, get cracking!
Gerard Allwein
New Startling statistic
Something like 70% of the soybeans currently grown are genetically engineered. (Now to what extent that means, whether it's actual put this gene here and take this gene out, or whether it's just advanced hormone therapy, or selection, or what, I don't know.)
"Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it."
-- Donald Knuth
New Predator inefficiency
completely eats the difference.

As a life member of PETA (People Eating Tasty Animals) I wish your argument worked. But it doesn't, because the amount of resources (land, water, energy, chemicals) it takes to produce X calories of beef is far higher than the amount of resources it takes to produce X calories of most kinds of edible vegitation. Even taking into account the fertilizer that cows produce.

It doesn't take evil technology to make eating plants less damaging than eating cows. At pretty much any technological level, carnivores do more damage. Except perhaps in terms of making an economy run. Farmers can produce more edible calories without expanding the fields or resorting to exotic biotech, simply by reducing the number of cows. Fertilizer might be a challenge without any cows, but the number of cows could be reduced quite a bit before a fertilizer shortage would occur. Except for those exotic biotechs, which tend to require fancy chemicals instead of dung.

No, I'm not some kind of vegitarian activist - I buy my dead cows by the quarter cow, and there is a chunk of dead cow ready for my lunch right now. Also some rice. I recognize that I am consuming more resources than I really need to. So be it. I do not aspire to be harmless.

----
"You don't have to be right - just use bolded upper case" - annon.
New Re: Predator inefficiency
You are correct that producing animals requires much higher more stuff. But that wasn't my point. You could have substituted your argument for producing more veggies in place of mine for producing more veggies. The result would be the same. We still have to produce the infrastructure to manage the change. And that infrastructure is complicated, expensive, and requires a lot of technologies. Anyhow, I doubt we could eliminate raising animals in place of veggies because animal products are used in a lot more than just food. You'll be wanting to replace all those too. That will require more tech, start now, time's awasting...

My point was that in order to fail to consume all that Ashton wishes us to fail to consume, he has no way to get from here to there. We get in the way because we want too many things. We even want the things that will allow us to consume less, and have to produce those things, thus starting the cycle all over again.

But I do not think it is a zero sum game. We can consume less, but we won't get there by attempting to change human nature, we'll get there because we've learned how to become more efficient and do it in such a way that we would want to do it.



Gerard Allwein
New It's all soluble without magic.
But only after enough take the 12-step course beyond that comfy level, denial. Meanwhile we shall indulge our fav econo-fantasies, elide from our mentation the concept of exponential (That's the way to deal with scary things that go bump in the night!)

And order another HumVee (the wanna-be UAV version) with the white rhino-skin seats and the Bose stereo - so we don't have to hear the sounds of the things squashed by the (optional with A/C) caterpillar treads.

As mentioned above: justifying the horrendous side effects of billions n'billions of cattle as "a marvelous source of protein" is ~ like our other pseudo-economic theories for the maintenenance of bizness as usual: Hey! next quarter's gonna be Great. Who cares about quarter III - until quarter II?

We could fix lots, IMhO - but I doubt we'll begin to try until likely, we will have missed all the windows of opportunity. It's just 'US' - and I Gotta be Me(-Me-Me).

Better get started on that boffin-clone farm - to Keep The Good Things Flowing (like ketchup.. ketchup.. if'n ya ever catch Garrison Keillor & Co. ?) Hey I know! Pay 'em with stock options. There - all fixed.


Ashton
What, me worry?
Won't happen on My shift!
ZZZzzzzzzz
Oops - time to turn the Ocelot on the Bar-B-Q
New Nit: Most cow methane is due to burping.
[link|http://www.durable.gc.ca/radio-video/radio/radio1_e.phtml|Here]'s a Canadian radio show report about it.

The gas is methane. It's not the most plentiful gas linked to global warming; that title goes to carbon dioxide. But kilo-for-kilo, methane is said to have 21 times the warming effect of CO2.And it's becoming more abundant in the atmosphere every year. Methane is produced by all plant-eating animals, including the world's 1.3 billion beef cattle and dairy cows. Dr. Paul McCaughy is a research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in Brandon.

World wide, cattle produce enormous qualities of methane-probably about 15 per cent of world wide emissions of methane. Individual cattle can produce about 65 kilograms of methane per year.

Actually, the gas is produced by bacteria in the cow's digestive system. According to the experts, about 85 per cent of that gas escapes through the animal's mouth and nose in the form of quiet, but frequent, belches. McCaughey and other government researchers are now looking for ways to reduce that gas production. Among their findings so far: methane levels can be cut substantially when the animal is served high-quality feed, rich in alfalfa and young grasses. McCaughey says the results of this research will benefit both the environment and the farmer.

Methane is an energy loss to the cow and if we can somehow reduce methane production, we can improve the bottom line and make cattle production more profitable for farmers. So that would be a win-win situation for both society and the farmer.


Emphasis added.

Cheers,
Scott.
New Gotta Love.. the implications and our next plan -
Just like the new Palm XLII with add-on 42-'fix anything module':

All we gots to do is reengineer the cow for less burping -- er maybe reengineer the bacteria for less burp-factor in cows -- er maybe reengineer the humanoids for more resistance to the new strain of bacteria which tends to interact with the reengineered corn fed the cows - and the reengineered deadly bees which pollinate the corn and ... ...

(But DON'T ponder for very long: WTF SAYS..? we POSITIVELY *NEED* 1.3 billion cows/cattle-steers, yada yada.)



Ashton
I never admit my species origin, when travelling - it's so humiliating whenever they find out..
     Why they hate us: the envy theory - (marlowe) - (43)
         Interesting. - (Brandioch) - (2)
             Why ask why? - (marlowe) - (1)
                 Voodoo economics - (nking)
         Laughing my tail off.... - (Simon_Jester) - (3)
             Bin Laden is winning? - (marlowe) - (2)
                 Marlowe... - (Simon_Jester)
                 Depends on your definition of winning - (nking)
         Wow! a veritable glossary of cant - (Ashton) - (24)
             Minor nitpick...... - (Mike)
             Ash, you're amazing. - (Arkadiy) - (3)
                 Ash has always been a very selective skeptic... - (marlowe)
                 I heard it differently. - (Brandioch)
                 Curses! Foiled Again. Milliards n'Milliards of Stars.. - (Ashton)
             Pardon me, your envy is showing. - (marlowe) - (16)
                 Wrong measures - (gtall) - (15)
                     'Consumption' - a pretty spot-on measure after all. - (Ashton) - (14)
                         Depends on how you calculate waste - (gtall) - (6)
                             Startling statistic - (wharris2)
                             Predator inefficiency - (mhuber) - (1)
                                 Re: Predator inefficiency - (gtall)
                             It's all soluble without magic. - (Ashton)
                             Nit: Most cow methane is due to burping. - (Another Scott) - (1)
                                 Gotta Love.. the implications and our next plan - - (Ashton)
                         Malthus has been patient with us? - (marlowe) - (6)
                             Gosh marlowe, sometimes your rhetorical questions are just - (Ashton) - (5)
                                 Begging the question. Whence the power? - (marlowe) - (4)
                                     The more rapacious 'won', of course - (Ashton) - (3)
                                         Big problem with that theory. Conflicts with real world. - (marlowe) - (2)
                                             Any use of the word 'real' to bolster a stereotype - (Ashton) - (1)
                                                 Methinks you're suffering from reality envy. -NT - (marlowe)
             A veritable balance of cant. - (marlowe) - (1)
                 Thus speaks one who has never served. - (Brandioch)
         Isn't this your third or fourth "why they hate us"link? - (Silverlock) - (2)
             Yeah, I'm going for a record. - (marlowe) - (1)
                 No hate needed. I just calls 'em as I sees 'em -NT - (Silverlock)
         Envy theory, good answer. - (nking)
         Primitive black magic? - (mhuber) - (6)
             Envy is a symptom of pride. - (marlowe) - (5)
                 For you, maybe. - (Brandioch) - (2)
                     Who fears welfare queens? - (marlowe) - (1)
                         Perhaps you don't listen. - (Brandioch)
                 A bit of theological theory - (mhuber) - (1)
                     Ben Franklin's take - (Ashton)

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