Beware the plant eaters
By: Vineet Tiruvadi
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Steadily increasing food prices are spawning more of those pesky vegetarian types. Besides threatening the very fabric of society, along with our delectable dinners, they can be a very distracting nuisance. But don't worry. With a few potent defenses you can bring them back to the side of reason and maintain the innocence of society's impressionable children.
Increasing demand for food, as a result of sky-rocketing populations, leads to an increase in food prices. Natural disasters, such as the Midwest floods, don't help either. While the brunt of the "food crisis" hasn't manifested itself in the U.S. yet, the increasing demands of the affluent China and India demonstrate an impending food resource competition, much like oil and jobs.
Some may take this as a warning to streamline our diets and become more efficient and healthy eaters. Naturally, they must be stopped.
Their first attack may target meat's inefficiency in energy transferal. It's a basic biological concept: every transfer of energy from one level to another, such as a plant to a rabbit, results in a substantial loss of energy. That means if we eat a rabbit that has eaten 20 blades of grass we'll get a lot less energy than if we ate just those 20 blades of grass. The vegetarians may tell you that it makes more sense to eat plants/producers because that leads to the greatest energy transfer efficiency, allowing us to feed more people with the available grain we have. Obviously that's wrong. The real solution to getting more energy out of our food would be to eat more rabbits; that's basic math. Watch as the vegetarian is rendered speechless. You won this round.
With growing fear in their eyes, the vegetarians may resort to attacking our prized layers of insulation. Supposedly, a vegetarian diet is "healthier" for the body. With a properly thought out diet you can get all the nutrients you need and be healthier, with greater culinary and monetary efficiency. I don't need to point out the grievous flaws in that statement, but I will. "Thought out diet" is just a euphemism for intellectual-elite smorgasbord. If the vegetarian attempts to propound the "health benefits," just mention the fact that without meat, a human being is 90 percent more likely to contract tenuisfiguratis, a debilitating condition with no known cure. Of course, this disease is made up, but while the vegetarian looks it up you can down at least three more steaks: a hefty moral victory: round two goes to you.
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