• @[email protected]
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    1242 days ago

    Prion diseases. Accumulation of different substances, like mercury, lead, strontium-90, and, a new contender to the list: micro plastics. And you’ll want to have a look at a person’s medication and likely want to make sure they’ve been off of it for a few days before consuming their flesh.

    • @amzd
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      491 day ago

      Farm animals are legally allowed to eat actual plastic, not only microplastics. If you’re afraid of microplastics or accumulation of substances maybe don’t eat meat.

      Legal limit of plastic in animal feed is 0.15% in the EU

      A cow eats 25kg of dry food a day

      25/100*0.15 = 0.0375kg = 37.5grams
      

      A plastic bag weighs 6-8grams.

      You are legally allowed to feed your cow 5 plastic bags a day (as a snack)

      • @tacosplease
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        32 hours ago

        The cow can have a little bit of plastic. As a treat :)

      • @FireRetardant
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        181 day ago

        Bioaccumulation concentrates more pollutants the higher up the food chain you go. It is part of why most meat we eat comes from vegetarian animals. The fish we eat are often predatory so common advice is the keep the smaller and younger ones that are still big enough to be worth filleting. You don’t actually want to eat a trophy sized fish because they’ve accumulated more pollutants. Trophy sized fish are better off being realsed, they are often good breeders and help keep healthy population numbers.

        • @[email protected]
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          101 day ago

          Of course, something that eats cows that eat a shitton of plastic, will have even more plastic in it.

          But that doesn’t mean that it’s healthy to eat an animal that has been fed (assuming they are slaughtered at 3 years, and ignoring the climate impact, the ethics of slaughtering an animal in its youth, etc)…

          41 kg of plastic

          • @amzd
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            31 day ago

            I think if you don’t count the culling of baby calves the average age is ~6years so like 82kg of plastic.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 day ago

              Thanks for your feedback, I was guesstimating off the top of my head. On doing some research, I see meat cows are usually slaughtered at 18 months - 2 years old in the Netherlands.

              5-6 years is the number I see for dairy cows.

              • @amzd
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                21 day ago

                Ah that’s the one I must’ve been thinking of, thanks.

    • TragicNotCute
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      682 days ago

      Prion diseases are scary shit and not to be fucked with.

    • Diplomjodler
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      221 day ago

      OK, mate, I have good news and bad news. The good news: we’re having a feast and you’re the guest of honour. The bad news: you need to stop taking your meds for a few days.

    • @weeeeum
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      132 days ago

      Honestly all that toxic shit is in our food already. There’s a reason it accumulated in the “victim” too.

      • @[email protected]
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        412 days ago

        The problem is bioaccumulation: taking in substances faster than you can metabolize and excrete them. Eating something that has already accumulated something is worse than accumulating it from the same original sources. That’s why you can do suicide by vitamin A poisoning by eating carnivore livers.

        • TheTechnician27
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          2 days ago

          It’s also the case that when you’re eating plant-based foods, unlike meat and dairy products, you’re eating alpha- and beta-carotene and beta-cryptoxanthin, which your body can convert to Vitamin A and which don’t cause hypervitaminosis.

          So if you’re just learning “Oh, shit, Vitamin A can poison me”, don’t let that hold you back from squash, yams, carrots etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      132 days ago

      aren’t prion diseases usually just a thing for the brain? though I haven’t considered the medication aspect… I want to eat a human heart some day, any other things I’d need to consider? I guess I’ll just take the risk with the medications.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          142 days ago

          While this is true, the main prion diseases that occur in humans do come specifically from neural matter.

        • @[email protected]
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          132 days ago

          the funny thing is I’m being entirely serious. I need a heart transplant and if I survive I want to turn my old heart into burgers and share them with my girlfriend and boyfriend.

          • @[email protected]
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            123 hours ago

            Would you be able to get your old heart tho? I don’t imagine hospitals give back organs to people

            • @[email protected]
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              320 hours ago

              the doctor said I can get it back. though it’d be in formaldehyde and after they did sciencey stuff on it, not sure if its still edible at that point. if eating it isn’t an option I’ll make pendants out of it. cut a part off and put it in a little glass vial.

          • @[email protected]
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            72 days ago

            Is there enough substance to turn it into burgers, plural? An average human heart is, what, fist-sized I think? Seems to me like you’d get one, maybe one and a half patties out of that, no? And you probably can’t even use all of it, I’d assume.

            • Superb
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              2 days ago

              A pure heart burger probably wouldn’t be good anyways. You could mix it with another meat

            • @[email protected]
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              31 day ago

              I have dilated cardiomyopathy so my heart is humongous. and yea I plan to mix it with other meat

          • @[email protected]
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            72 days ago

            That’s why I eat lots of chicken from the worst methods of rearing when having an infection: cheap antibiotics.

      • @[email protected]
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        92 days ago

        aren’t prion diseases usually just a thing for the brain?

        Don’t you want to eat the crispy thinking bacon? Your loss. Next thing you’re telling me you don’t want to eat the testicles …