Guest guest Posted November 3, 2003 Report Share Posted November 3, 2003 In a message dated 11/3/03 1:56:40 AM Eastern Standard Time, s.fisher22@... writes: > as chris mentioned recently, this board has a long history of civility and > i > think most of us would prefer to keep it that way. we pretty much " police " > ourselves and do a damn good job of it most of the time. i'm sure i'm not > the only one who would appreciate it if you joined us in keeping it civil > and staying focused on the *topic* of discussion and leave the sarcastic > jibes and personal comments behind. > Dave's just a little sensitive today ;-) Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 3, 2003 Report Share Posted November 3, 2003 > > i honestly have NO IDEA where you > got all these notions about me from a fairly benign post on hydroponic meat! > all i did was disagree with you on something and state why. not sure how > that got interpreted as contempt for what you wrote and a declaration of my > " grand mission in life. " i'm not in the habit of personally attacking > *anyone* as you seem to think i did to you. you would be hard pressed to > find a *single* post that i've written to this list over the past year and > half (and there have been MANY) in which i showed contempt or arrogance, or > personally attacked anyone. it's just not my style. I wish that Tom had not brought it back up, and I suspect he has less concern for you than he's pretending and more of an agenda to shut me up, since he can't really win a fair argument with me. I was happy to have put the argument behind us, and don't really want to have an enemy in you. But regardless, since it _has_ now been brought up, I guess it must be taken apart piece by piece and it seen just what was actually said. I went back and read the posts, and you are right that there was not a single post but rather an escalation over the course of a few. My first post was #32725 where I wrote " Actually, _I'm_ looking forward to the eventuality of directly cloned meat. This will allow humans to consume flesh foods, guaranteed free of e-coli, etc., without the brutal necessity of butchering our fellow beings. " This was followed by a series of replies where basically it was insisted that such could never be possible because of reasons x, y and z. I didn't consider any of these posts inflammatory in any way, maybe the other participants thought so, I don't know. You were not yet one of them at this point. Then in reply to one of them where I wrote " since we _know_ about this, we will add them, or whatever substrate is needed by cattle to produce them, to the nutrient mixture delivered to the tissue cultures. " you wrote in message #32767 " you are WAY more trusting of the small group of human beings controlling such a project and their funder$ than i am. " Now while I didn't really consider this inflammatory or anything like that, I didn't like the implication that I was naive, and I especially didn't like it, being as it was based on what you considered the attendant political and/or economic issues. Bases upon which I never argued anything, and so based upon which I resented your calling me " trusting " . Again, I didn't consider it inflammatory, but I definitely did not want to leave the charge of naivete unanswered. So in message #32776 I wrote " I'm not trusting of anybody, ... " and " We're discussing the feasability of producing nutritious meat in culture mediums, not what choices some commercial food producer might make in the future when using such technology. " Your reply to this one, message #32811 is where you first really get my goat, when you write (emphasis mine) " WRONG. it is not logical to dissociate the two because " a " doesn't exist in a vacuum and is not an end in and of itself. it WILL be followed by " b " so we clearly have to look at what " b " is too. this is the reality, the practicality of it. if you JUST want to have an interesting but TOTALLY IMPRACTICAL CONVERSATION about the theoretical benefits/drawbacks of such meat, then that is another issue. I'M MORE INTERESTED in the PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS of such technology as *that* is what would affect us, NOT THE THEORIES. " and " AS A WAPF CHAPTER LEADER, I'M much MORE CONCERNED with the PRACTICALITY of any situation, NOT LOVELY DISCUSSIONS on THEORETICAL models that will NEVER BE practiced in REALITY. my community wants nutrient dense foods and they want to support the local economy. if for no other reason, the hydroponic meat scenario, in practical terms, would probably only be practiced by agribusiness (which i'm guessing are the current funders), not small family farms, and from that perspective alone, it will further erode consumer's choice and erode local economies. " You have every right to be more interested in, or concerned with anything you want, and I never contested that fact, but I'm not " wrong " for discussing something other than your interests. So first I'm told I'm naive because I discuss the feasability of culturing meat without bothering to consider what Suze considers other more important ramifications. When I protest against _that_, I'm flatly told " wrong. " , and that the conversation that I chose to engage in was " totally impractical " and one in which she was not " interested " , after which she went on to detail just what she _is_ interested in. My thread was further denigrated as " a lovely discussion on theoretical models that will never be practiced in reality " , followed by further detail about what her community wants and how my interest doesn't serve that in any way. It is to these words that I referred when I wrote " Suze expressed contempt for the posting of anything not relevent to her grand mission in life. " Does nobody else find such characterizations as " totally impractical conversation " to be contemptuous? I replied to this one in message #32879 with " How can you tell me that I'm wrong? I'm telling you what _I_ was talking about. I think I know what subject _I'm_ talking about. " and " I'm telling you I'm not interested in any political incidentals, and I never brought them up, so you've no right to criticize or correct me on such points. If that's what interests you, and you want to turn the thread in that direction, then by all means do so, but don't do it by attacking me. Just append your own thoughts in reply to one of the messages in the thread. " I fail to see any inflammatory language on my part, only defense against the charges made. Furthermore, you can see that it was here that I first characterized message #32811 as an " attack " , so you can't act surprised to see it only now, nor now can you claim not to know why I characterized it as such either. I continue in #32879 with " You certainly have alot of cheek to call someone else's conversation " totally impractical " . There's more going on in the world than just _your_ personal concerns. " Here is the _first_ comment made by myself that could even remotely be construed as inflammatory, but please note your choice of words upon which it followed. To your comment " if you just want to have an interesting but totally impractical conversation about the theoretical benefits/drawbacks of such meat, then that is another issue. " I further respond with " No, that was _the_ issue, if _you_ want to have a conversation about the political concomitants of the matter, then _that_ is in fact " another issue " . " which is completely true. I've reposted the entire exchange here so anybody can see that the original issue was whether such meat could ever be nutritionally equivalent to so-called real meat. The political side that was later brought in was in fact " another issue " . After being told about the worthlessness of my line of conversation and how it ought to have followed the lines prescribed by Suze, I finally become annoyed enough to let her have a dose of my own opinions about the various things she thought were so much more important. The rest of my reply in #32879 follows. " Now we know what _you're_ more interested in, but this is not your private list. Furthermore, you've now opened the door for me to tell you what _I'm_ interested and not interested in. " " I'm on this list too, and I don't give a damn about supporting small family farmers. Whoever will give me the product I want at the best price, I'll support. I don't romanticize the small family farm, nor am I a technophobe. " " That's lovely for you! I'm guessing that some sort of brightly colored sash or shiny badge comes along with that position? " " If you're not concerned with " lovely discussions on theoretical models " then you need not have joined the thread, right? I'm not concerned with what you discuss in many threads, so I simply don't join them. Here again you also declare what you think is, or is not practical, but I have my own ideas about what I think is practical, and I don't defer to you. " " I'm not concerned with _your_ community or _your_ local economy. The only " community " with which I'm concerned is my own family and circle of friends. Furthermore, _I_ participate in a _world_ economy, and don't give one whit about propping up inviable local enterprises that _ought_ to die a natural death. " " Many many people now grow plants at home hydroponically, and I can tell you that I would grow meat this way too if I could, before I would eat anything that came from a slaughterhouse. And _that's_ what _I'm_ talking about! ;-) " -end quote- If my language is considered inflammatory in these last comments, then so be it. At least at this point no one can pretend not to know exactly what sort of remarks provoked them. Alas though, they were not even the last provocative remarks, for how you have also accused me of trolling. I think anybody can see which were the first trollish words to appear in the thread. It is those that I marked in bold above, for not only is their tone contemptuous, but it should also now be obvious to all that they in no way logically followed from what I originally wrote. > her role as the leader of some " Wildly Angry Premenstrual > Females " (that's what WAPF stands for, right?). > > ---->is this an attempt at wit? Yes, and a successful one. > have you read what the stated mission of this forum is, and how it's > *foundation* is the WAP/NT paradigm with it's encumbant valueing of local > sustainable farming? (this is in reference to your first post, which i > honestly don't see the point of responding to). Which first post? The same post that I'm calling the first post? If you really don't see the point of responding to it, why did you? We wouldn't be where we are now if you hadn't. Though of course you're just being disingenuous. Your real intent is just to show further contempt for my posts, just as you did before. > not that you have to share those views, in fact dissenting > opinions are welcomed and encouraged, and for the most part > are what makes this forum interesting. Well thank you your highness. Are you a list-owner or moderator of this group? Is that the reason you feel you can take such a condescending tone with me? > but your comments to date on this subject don't smack of a > dissenting view as much as they do of trolling, actually. > (such as the comment above.) All of my comments to date on the subject have now been posted in one place for all to see. So it should now be obvious to all as well who the real troll is. > ------>WHAT attack? LOL, maybe it's just the late hour, but this > conversation seems rather surreal to me. i just re-read my post and there > was absolutely NO attack and no expression of contempt. it ain't my style as > i said, i have too much respect for my fellow human beings (well most, > anyway, LOL) to be involved in personal attacks. i'm more interested in > *ideas*. if i thought there was anything in there that remotely resembled an > attack, i'd apologize, but i can't find a thing! See above. i'm sure i'm not > the only one who would appreciate it if you joined us in keeping it civil > and staying focused on the *topic* of discussion and leave the sarcastic > jibes and personal comments behind. So one should stay focused on the topic of discussion, and leave the sarcastic jibes behind, eh? Well if you aren't the proverbial pot calling the kettle black! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 3, 2003 Report Share Posted November 3, 2003 - >This will allow humans to consume >flesh foods, guaranteed free of e-coli, etc., Well, to divert the conversation back to its original subject, do you really think hydroponic meat would be guaranteed to be free of microbial contamination? (I'm taking your " etc. " to cover e. coli as well as other categories of problems.) For that to happen, the meat would have to be grown in perfect clean-room conditions. Animals, by contrast, have built-in immune systems, and when they're fed healthy diets -- as pastured grass-fed cattle are -- their meat is healthy too, provided the animals are processed in clean plants and not contaminated by meat from grain-fed cattle suffering severe dysbiosis. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 3, 2003 Report Share Posted November 3, 2003 well, this is the most bizarre post i've read in some time. i'm not touching it with a 10-foot-pole! LOL her highness Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2003 Report Share Posted November 4, 2003 >> her role as the leader of some " Wildly Angry Premenstrual >> Females " (that's what WAPF stands for, right?). >> >> ---->is this an attempt at wit? > >Yes, and a successful one. You see, this is inflammatory. This is a personal attack. You're making fun of Suze by characterizing her as a stereotypical member of a group rather than treating her as an individual and an equal, thereby discounting her argument. One's arguments should stand completely isolated from their person. What you said is every bit as insulting to women as it would be insulting to gays for me to make a joke about your membership in the Grand Old Waterskiing Foundation. You're a member of Gays Obsessed With Fashion? Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha! Funny, right? No, stupid and insulting. Tom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 4, 2003 Report Share Posted November 4, 2003 , it's not my goal to " win " any discussion. I'm just interested in learning and aiming for a fuller understanding of nutrition as well as the world in general. The last thing on my mind is shutting up an intelligent party in an interesting discussion. New and contrary ideas are the lifeblood of intellectual progress. Your twising our discussion into a battle and attributing ulterior motives to my posts is childish. I say this bluntly, with no intent or desire to belittle you. I'm saying what appears to me to be true, but of course it's just my opinion. If you disagree, fine! Let's just move on. Ideally, all of the foregoing should be understood tacitly, but I want to make it clear. Anyway, no hard feelings whatsoever, seriously. Let's get back to our discussion! Tom > I wish that Tom had not brought it back up, and I suspect > he has less concern for you than he's pretending and more > of an agenda to shut me up, since he can't really win a fair > argument with me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 > clearly has the upper hand the logic of his argument. The practical > feasibility and political ramifications are absolutely dissociable ------>well, in *your* mind perhaps, but i stand by my original post that for any *practical* purposes discussing the ability to create hydroponic meat in a vacuum without discussing how it would impact *anything* is impractical. not that there is anything wrong with that - if you look at my original post you'll see that i in fact said IF it's discussed in a vacuum, it's simply " impractical " . however....if you guys want to discuss it in a vacuum, have at it! suze Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 In a message dated 11/9/03 1:17:37 AM Eastern Standard Time, s.fisher22@... writes: > ------>well, in *your* mind perhaps, but i stand by my original post > that for any *practical* purposes discussing the ability to create > hydroponic meat in a vacuum without discussing how it would impact > *anything* is impractical. not that there is anything wrong with > that - if you look at my original post you'll see that i in fact said > IF it's discussed in a vacuum, it's simply " impractical " . Suze, they are dissociable in anyone's mind and towards the end of the above paragraph you reveal that you simply don't choose to dissociate the two, though you are perfectly capable of doing so. This discussion is simply making a circle now. The discussion *was* about technical feasibility, and you didn't simply say, " well, this *other* issue is an important related issue which we should also discuss " but rather you called " wrong " for discussing the issue he was choosing to discuss rather than the issue *you* prefer to discuss. One good reason to dissociate them (not that you *need* a reason to talk about what you want to talk about) is that technical feasibility is an intensive property whereas political feasibility is not. In other words, whether something can or cannot be done with technology is not affected by who is doing it or who they are doing it for. Whether or not a technologically feasible thing happens to *get* carried out *is* affected by political feasibility, BUT political feasibility is wholly dependent on the political landscape. We should probably call this politico-economic feasibility, because the force of, say, consumer demand, as at least as powerful as political forces, especially in a so-called " democracy " where consumer demand can affect the polity directly. Technical feasibility can be discussed based on fact, logic, and extrapolation, whereas political feasibility is subject to change and is simply guesswork. Any sensible economic analysis recognizes that the " powers that be " have no aversion whatsoever to producing nutritious meat, but rather want to maximize profit, and therefore sell sub-nutritious meat that is produced cheaply to the market that does not demand other methods of production. So there is no reason to " trust " or " distrust " producers to " do the right thing, " but rather one would expect them to produce according to demand, and we don't know what consumers will demand. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 In a message dated 11/9/03 11:57:29 AM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: Uh, the desire for profit is central to the profit system, and since > nutritious meat will never be as profitable as less-nutritious agricultural > > products, there's always going to be an incentive for producers to produce > less-nutritious products and to tilt and sway consumer demand (which is > fairly malleable) away from nutrition. Even if we all magically entered an > NT world, the incentive to change demand would still be there. , take a trip to the health food store. Consumers who are educated or conditioned to believe that any given product x2 is healthier than its counterpart x1 will pay up to three times the price for x2. There is no direct relationship between nutrition and profitability. There is an indirect relationship and it is dependent on consumer demand. Since we don't know much about how nutritious hydroponic meat would be created, we have no reason whatsoever to believe that this indirect relationship will hold true in the same way. You're confusing " profitable " with " low-cost. " Something is only more profitable when lower-cost if the revenue remains constant, and it is quite clear that that is not the case when it comes to products marketed for their health value. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 9, 2003 Report Share Posted November 9, 2003 Uh, the desire for profit is central to the profit system, and since nutritious meat will never be as profitable as less-nutritious agricultural products, there's always going to be an incentive for producers to produce less-nutritious products and to tilt and sway consumer demand (which is fairly malleable) away from nutrition. Even if we all magically entered an NT world, the incentive to change demand would still be there. >Any sensible economic analysis recognizes that the " powers that be " have no >aversion whatsoever to producing nutritious meat, but rather want to maximize >profit, and therefore sell sub-nutritious meat that is produced cheaply to >the >market that does not demand other methods of production. So there is no >reason to " trust " or " distrust " producers to " do the right thing, " but >rather one >would expect them to produce according to demand, and we don't know what >consumers will demand. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 10, 2003 Report Share Posted November 10, 2003 if you look at my original post you'll see that i in fact said > > IF it's discussed in a vacuum, it's simply " impractical " . > > Suze, they are dissociable in anyone's mind and towards the end of the above > paragraph you reveal that you simply don't choose to dissociate the two, > though you are perfectly capable of doing so. > > This discussion is simply making a circle now. ------->i'm not sure why you wanted to rehash this thread in the first place, but as long as you chose to not read what i wrote, which i thought was pretty clear, then it will do nothing but go in circles. maybe my wording *was* unclear or perhaps you are misenterpreting it, but again, i implied that it CAN be discussed in a vacuum, however i find that unrealistic and impractical. i think it's a given that the point of developing such technology would be to USE it. and again as i said in the original post, it's impractical to look at " a " and ignore " b " which *will* follow " a " . >>>The discussion *was* about > technical feasibility, and you didn't simply say, " well, this *other* issue is > an important related issue which we should also discuss " but rather you called > " wrong " for discussing the issue he was choosing to discuss rather than > the issue *you* prefer to discuss. ---->it's not which issue *i* prefer to discuss, it's looking at the issue wholistically, if you will, rather than dissociating a part from the whole. besides, again, i said it can be discussed in a vacuum, but that it's simply impractical. maybe i should've simply left out the word " wrong " as it appears to have gotten some hackles up. so let's say, nix " wrong " and read the rest of the para, which is the guts of my argument. i honestly don't have much time to waste on fruitless conversations, which this appears to be, so if i do respond again, it will be brief. suze Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 10, 2003 Report Share Posted November 10, 2003 In a message dated 11/10/03 8:49:59 AM Eastern Standard Time, s.fisher22@... writes: > ------->i'm not sure why you wanted to rehash this thread in the > first place, It wasn't my perception that I was " rehashing " it because I responded directly to 's post as soon as I received it. This perception may have been brought about, however, due to a deficiency in 's delivery system, which is not too inconceivable. but as long as you chose to not read what i wrote, which > i thought was pretty clear, then it will do nothing but go in > circles maybe my wording *was* unclear or perhaps you are > misenterpreting it, but again, i implied that it CAN be discussed in > a vacuum, however i find that unrealistic and impractical. i think > it's a given that the point of developing such technology would be to > USE it. and again as i said in the original post, it's impractical to > look at " a " and ignore " b " which *will* follow " a " . Suze I understand what you wrote, but I was replying specifically to the relevance of your response to . In other words, your belief that there are other issues that must be discussed if one is to have a comprehensive discussion about the prospect of hydroponic meat is absolutely true; however, your response to david that he is " wrong " on the issue of technical feasibility for this reason is a non-sequitor. There are two more logical inconsistencies to deal with as well. And please note that a) I'm responding to several people, not only you, who levelled the same criticisms against and therefore if you are not interested in this I'm writing it for the general topic that others have commented on, and this is not personal criticism and certainly not bashing of you, as I explicitly defended your posts as NOT contemptuous. Anyway, first of all it should be noted that it is virtually impossible to discuss two issues at once. You can do so in the same discussion, but even then you must separate the issues into paragraphs or sections and deal with one at a time. was no more discussing the issue of technical feasibility " in a vaccuum " than you were discussing politics and ethics " in a vaccuum, " as I don't recall you really addressing the issue of technical feasibility. Second of all, the initial response to about him be trusting etc was not so much a case of discussing " a " without " b " when " b " follows " a, " but rather a case of discussing the feasibility of " x " as regards to technical factors such as " a " " b " and " c " while ignoring politico-economic factors such as " d " " e " and " f " which also affect the feasibility of " x. " In other words, the initial claim on 's part was that hydroponically produced meat can be made as nutritious as grass-fed meat because we are technically able to provide the substrates necessary for the production of CLA and other important factors, so there is no reason to believe hydroponics would have a qualitatively similar effect on the nutritional quality of meat to the effect of grain/confinement-feeding. You responded by saying he is more trusting of the powers that be than you are. The only sensible interpretation of the implication of this statement is that, despite the technical feasibility, the people in control of producing the hydroponic meat would either have no interest in producing a more nutritious product or would have an interest in producing a non-nutritious product. Your comments about the economic *implications* of producing hydro meat, IOW the " b " that follows " a, " came later, in discussing family farms, etc. Now this latter part IS a valid concern and you are perfectly right for bringing the issue up, but it addresses the issue of ethics, not feasibility, which also brought up, asserting that hydroponic meat was more ethical due to the supposed humane effects on animal welfare. It is not a logical response with which to claim is " wrong " about a) his beliefs on the feasibility or his claim that the feasibility can be discussed without regard to the above. The comments on political feasibility are more related, but rest mostly on guesswork and therefore don't carry much weight, and furthermore don't really counter 's assertion that it is *feasible* for the hydro meat to be *possible* because the simple *possibility* that certain interests will interfere with a certain course of development do not in any way negate the other possible courses of development, in which case the latter are still considered " feasible. " Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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