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Many of my fellow vegans may be offended by what I'm about to say, but my answer is that it depends on how it makes you feel. Â Your choice of food as well as any other choice has nothing to do with anyone's opinion of it and everything to do with what feels good to you. Â In other words, this question has to be answered on an individual basis. Â To eat meat or not is relative. Â However, despite its relativity this question has been at the crux of much debate between meat-eaters and vegetarians.
Meat-eaters assert that their consumption of meat does not in any way negate their love for animals. Â Meanwhile, vegetarians maintain a refusal to kill and consume the very thing that they so love. Â Both sides believe as strongly in the validity of their position as in the correctness of it and herein lies the source of the discord. Â To illustrate this, here are some of the major points made by both sides.
Meat-Eaters say:
If it's okay to eat plants then it's okay to eat meat because plants are living things too.
Our ancestors ate meat.
Mankind is a part of the food chain that all animals are a part of so eating meat is part of survival.
If meat were banned governments would collapse and millions of jobs would be lost.
If it's ok to kill people in wars it's okay to kill a cow.
Taking away meat takes away individual freedom.
Vegetarians say:
Plants are not sentient beings. Â They don't have a brain or central nervous system so they don't experience pain or have emotions.
Humans are and always have been omnivores so eating meat is a choice not a requirement to survive.
Meat is a second-level nutrient so why not go straight to the source.
Research has shown that meat contributes to heart disease, hypertension, some cancer and Type 2 Diabetes.
The human body is meat so if it's not okay to eat humans, it's not okay to eat any other meat.
A plant-based diet is better for the environment and the food that it takes to feed livestock deprives billions of starving people of food.
Though I have chosen a plant-based diet, my perspective on this is that food is necessary for survival. Â The choice of food is an individual choice so the discord that we feel towards eating meat or not is our own. Â Is our well-being really contingent upon what we eat? Â Or might it be what we're thinking and all the worrying about the choices of others that keeps us in a state of mental and physical discord? Â We are all drawn to the food that is best for us individually therefore, our personal preferences are not and will never be identical. Â After all, it is highly improbable that there will ever be a "one size fits all" food choice, behavior or any other preference.