DVS
A ghost from your dreams
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2002
- Posts
- 11,416
A local delicacy? Ew! I just can't believe some people. Is it any wonder why we have strange incurable diseases coming from that part of the world? 
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A local delicacy? Ew! I just can't believe some people. Is it any wonder why we have strange incurable diseases coming from that part of the world?![]()
:O note to self, NEVER visit China
Visiting China isn't the problem. Just eat vegetarian.
Nah, not really. I'm just a purist, in some cases. But I love most Italian foods, Mexican foods, Japanese and Chinese (the Americanized versions, I guess) as I'm sure I'd like many others, if I get the chance to try them. I love spicy hot foods but I've only traveled out of the country once, back in 1962 to Canada. Back then, I was even more particular. But, I'm better than one of my sisters who refuses to eat lobster or crab, just because she doesn't like how they look. She's never tasted either one.I can only say, DVS you must be a hard man to cook for.
I don't care if my food choices are considered finicky. I'll never be taking a trip to China, so I don't have to worry about eating cat, dog or rat.If I were in China and I were offered cat I would eat it. If I were offered dog, I would eat it. There are several species of rat that live in forested areas and eat fruit, that are delicacies in China. If I were offered those, I would eat them. The point of that article wasn't that the stew was cat meat but that it was poisoned. And the poison was a veggie.
It's quite true that some "strange incurable diseases" stem from the eating of bad food. One of the most horrific of course, is Mad Cow disease, which comes from the Western habit of feeding ground up cow bones to cows. We have forced cannibalism on vegetarian animals, and we've paid the price-- so have the cattle, for that matter.
We Americans are ridiculously finicky about what proper food is, and we have restricted ourselves to the most environmentally expensive animals and plants. We eat like spoiled little princesses.![]()
So, if we don't like it, there's more for you.I lived on a farm in NZ for 23 years, and lived in a small country village before that. When I was growing up we ate rabbit occasionally. Rabbits are a pest in NZ and my father worked for the local council as a pest destruction officer (this included rabbits and hares at first but grew to include possums as well that had been introduced from Australia).
Never eaten possum myself but our cats and dogs on the farm loved it - cheap pet food for only the cost of a .22 bullet. It has a bit of a musty smell and I have to say that smell was the only thing that gave me nausea when I was pregnant
I've eaten ox heart (a bit tough actually), sheep's heart, liver and kidneys. Not tripe, can't stand the texture! I had haggis once too it was lovely.
DVS cow's tongue is delicious!Sir turns a lovely shade of green if I mention it though
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If I were in China and I were offered cat I would eat it. If I were offered dog, I would eat it. There are several species of rat that live in forested areas and eat fruit, that are delicacies in China. If I were offered those, I would eat them. The point of that article wasn't that the stew was cat meat but that it was poisoned. And the poison was a veggie.
Your preferences are not the problem, though-- it's you ascribing moral disgustingness to other people's food the way you did.DVS said:I don't care if my food choices are considered finicky. I'll never be taking a trip to China, so I don't have to worry about eating cat, dog or rat.
Ah, the slippery slope argument, eh?If you were visiting a place where they still practice cannibalism, would you eat human if it was offered? Maybe a nice rump roast?
My ascribing moral disgusting-ness to other people's food is my choice as would someone who loves cat stew turning their nose up at some of the things I enjoy. I show my disgust for his eating cat stew. He might not like it that I eat cow or coat it with disgusting BBQ sauce. I would understand that. My mother thought BBQ sauce was disgusting and she was a great cook...just not BBQ.Your preferences are not the problem, though-- it's you ascribing moral disgustingness to other people's food the way you did.
You know that thing about being sex-positive? Where we learn to say; "It's not for me, but other people's choices are not my business?"
Same deal here.
Don't want an abortion? Don't have one. Don't approve of gay marriage? Don't marry another man. Don't want to eat cat? Wave it on if they pass you that plate. No big whoop-de-do.
Ah, the slippery slope argument, eh?
I've asked myself that question actually, and-- yes, I think I might. Of course I could change my mind very suddenly!
As I understand it though, cannibalistic people tend to chop human meat into small lumps, cook it as stew. If you notice, that's the default for most bush cookery. it's the most energy efficient method of heating and tenderising meats-- wild animals exercise their muscles a whole lot, and are very tough chewing otherwise!
Paul Theroux makes the argument that you can tell which cultures have beencannibalistic, because those potted meats, like Spam etc, are very popular there. There's an oily texture, he claims, that is similar to humanflesh.
Of course, many of those cultures are on small islands where there isn't much red meat available on the hoof, so I think it's a little bit suspect. Or... maybe not...
I couldn't consider eating a domesticated animal.
I remember a story a friend told me, about travelling in Cambodia. He was the honored guest in a village that is a hunting tribe, and they eat pretty much anything they can kill out there in the jungle. At the same time, they keep pets-- monkeys, pigs, dogs, the same species that they eat. The pet animals are loved, and named, and don't get eaten.I'm with DVS. I couldn't consider eating a domesticated animal. Instead, I'm gonna give my kitty cat an extra dose of cuddling and I'm gonna start right now.
Cats as food sounds like a good plan to me. Certainly better than letting them roam neighborhoods, hunting wildlife and shitting in garden beds.
Don't take things too literally. My humor is obviously lost if you're a serious type who take EVERYTHING seriously. I have a dry sense of humor. If you didn't catch it, I'm sorry, but it loses its punch, when I have to explain it. Sarcasm also has to have some truth in it to be sarcasm. There are diseases in some parts of the world, because of their age old cultural practices.Right, it's not for you. It's repugnant to your sensibilities.
Me, I avoid bell peppers whenever possible. They are yucky to my taste buds.
But we aren't any closer to moral perfection because we don't eat cat or bell peppers than someone who does is.
Your mom turned up her nose at BBQ sauce but she didn't claim that dreadful diseases came from people who like BBQ sauce, or that being murdered serves them right-- which is what you've said in so many words.
Yah see what I'm saying?