• @[email protected]
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    -111 year ago

    Sure. Glugging down the lactation of other species intended for their babies is weird. It’s weird and should be more stigmatized.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Hahaha, me too.

        I do think it is super weird to drink the breast milk of other animals. At the same time, I wouldn’t say that it’s a topic I take very seriously.

      • mommykink
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        11 year ago

        Water? The thing adult humans evolved to drink.

        • @Riplikash
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          81 year ago

          A good chunk of human adults also evolved to drink milk, my dude.

          • @xX_fnord_Xx
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            11 year ago

            Adapted I think is a better term than evolved. Most people would be lactose intolerant if they stopped drinking milk after being weened off of breast milk.

            • Stoneykins [any]
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              31 year ago

              Eh I feel like that is semantics. If we are specific and refer to how individuals adapt to be lactose tolerant, you could still say “humans evolved to drink milk” instead in reference to how the population of humans that could adapt and become lactose tolerant grew in relation to humans that couldn’t.

        • Stoneykins [any]
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          1 year ago

          Don’t appeal to evolution, evolution is weird. Evolution just does whatever survival says. If we can survive drinking milk, evolution is cool with it. But evolution is weird, evolution will be all like “You like cows milk huh? That’s cool, have you considered shrinking down and losing your brain and most internal organs to become a nipple latching milk parasite? No? Ok, I’ll ask again later.”

    • kase
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      81 year ago

      Are you saying it’d be less weird to glug down human milk?

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Well, yes, since we already do that. And human milk is at least from our species.

        I personally think that would be very weird, but less weird than drinking the breast milk of other species.

        I’ll refer you to another response from this wonderfully lively thread:

        "“What do you like to drink?”

        “Milk.”

        “What’s that?”

        “This breast juice from other animals. It’s super healthy for the percentage of our population that can digest it.”

        “Oh…Why from other animals?”

        “Well, we’re not going to drink human breast milk, that would be gross. I mean, we give it to babies. Cow and goat lactation, though, that’s for grown-ups.”"

        • kase
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          61 year ago

          Fair enough. Like the other commenter said in response, it’s good to remember that weird doesn’t mean bad, but you’re not wrong, it is pretty weird lol. The world is a goofy place :)

            • kase
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              21 year ago

              I was confused so I googled my name, and apparently käse means nonsense in German, so that’s cool! Is that why you said that?

              • @hakunawazo
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                31 year ago

                Käse in German means cheese. A dairy product. Therefore my comment. But you are not wrong, it is colloquially used to describe somebody talking rubbish in the following sentences: Du redest Käse. Das ist doch Käse.

                • kase
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                  31 year ago

                  Oh cool!! Thanks for the explanation

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Agreed, there are tons of weird and goofy things everywhere. They don’t bother me, but I notice and appreciate them.

            Drinking milk from other species is just one of the most common weird ones and one that I don’t think we examine fundamentally often enough haha. Plus I always think it’s funny.

            I always think of that. Tom Green skit where he drank milk straight from the udder of a cow and the ostensible joke is like look how crazy this guy is that he’s willing to drink milk straight from the cow!

            But that’s basically what everybody is doing, in my head anyway whenever I see someone drinking milk. It’s fun up there, in my head.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          You could make a similar argument as to why we eat animal meat instead of human meat and it would be just as stupid.

          • kase
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            21 year ago

            Not dissing your argument at all, but my first thought was of babies eating little pieces of human flesh and it made me giggle. Well now that I wrote I down it just sounds freaky, but in my head it sounded silly ¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯

            • @[email protected]
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              01 year ago

              You’re trying to make it seem like drinking milk is weird because it comes from an animal other than humans. But nearly all the food anyone eats comes from something that’s not a human.

              You’re also ignoring one of the big reasons we don’t drink human milk for longer - most human mothers stop producing milk after a certain length of time, whereas cows and goats and the like produce it more regularly, for longer periods of time.

              • @[email protected]
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                51 year ago

                Cows also stop producing milk naturally.

                You only think they don’t because we force-impregnate the eugenics cows to be pregnant and lactating all the time. When they have their babies, the baby is taken away immediately and the cow is force-impregnated again 6 weeks later. After a few years, the cow is killed and becomes deli meat.

                That is a strange horror show you are cheerleading for as “normal”.

                Also, stop pretending I’m saying things I’m not. It didn’t work for the others and it won’t work for you.

    • WashedOver
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      11 year ago

      I love milk in my tea and cream in my coffee not to mention ice cream but it’s still meant for helping calfs grow quickly into cows at the same time. We are talking huge gains quickly here.

      Some argue it’s why north American kids grow up so much faster and bigger than our Asian counterparts where milk and cheese is not as huge part of their diets. The kids hit puberty sooner too as a result. That’s changing in other parts of the world as cheese and milk make their ways into the diets even in places that never understood why Americans eat so much cheese on everything.

      Low fat products created enormous sources of removed fat that could be turned into all kinds of dairy products including cheeses. It’s also heavily subsidized by government too. Dairy is so cheap in the US as a result compared to even Canada.

      I don’t guzzle milk anymore like I did as a teen due to the amount of phlegm the body can create with its consumption. I’ve never forgotten a health video years ago that equated milk to drinking a glass of puss due to the things done to cows to make commercial milk.

      I guess in my mind cheese is adjacent but not milk, but that’s just fooling myself as I eat my cheese.

      It’s a huge industry in the west and I don’t think we will ever not see how great milk is for us. A lot is dedicated to keep those consumption numbers up and I do like my dairy products.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Wow! I think I had actually blocked out that pus memory but as soon as you said it my brain was like. Oh yeah you hated that, so I might have seen that.

    • PrivateNoob
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      11 year ago

      If we think about this way, yes it is indeed pretty weird but it has really great nutrients which are crucial for children to grow in a healthy way (in moderation just like with any other food, fruit, vegetable).

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I think milk has vitamins and nutrients as well, vitamins and nutrients that can be easily supplemented by other dietary sources.

        It’s much more the fact that it’s just day to day normal to drink breast milk from other animals.

        “What do you like to drink?”

        “Milk.”

        “What’s that?”

        “This breast juice from other animals. It’s super healthy for the percentage of our population that can digest it.”

        “Oh…Why from other animals?”

        “Well, we’re not going to drink human breast milk, that would be gross. I mean, we give it to babies. Cow and goat lactation, though, that’s for grown-ups.”

        • @[email protected]
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          121 year ago

          I don’t think “it’s weird therefore bad” is a good argument. If you’re gonna argue for veganism (which I don’t have a problem work doing!) I think there are way, way better reasons.

          • @[email protected]
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            -11 year ago

            I agree, can you point me to whichever commenter told you it was bad?

            I’m not big into veganism myself, but feel free to spread your vegan wings here if you like.

            Seems as appropriate a place as any.

            • @[email protected]
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              111 year ago

              “it’s weird and should be more stigmatized” that seems to be making a moral claim right? I guess you never explicitly said that it’s because it’s weird that it should be stigmatized, but it certainly seemed to be structured like that.

              And ah maybe I misunderstood, what you were saying just sounds like how a lot of ppl talk about it on the vegan forums I used to regular, lmao.

              • PrivateNoob
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                31 year ago

                If the original comment was truly a sarcasm then I give a huge applause for Varyk. It’s certainly 200 IQ level.

              • @[email protected]
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                -11 year ago

                I’m not sure what triggers a moral defense there, except for the traditional context of the word “stigma”, maybe? Yeah, might have taken it one assumption too far.

                I guess you can make a moral argument against drinking milk because of factory farming infrastructure, but even with factory farming I think anyone would find it easier to argue against the mass slaughter in horrific conditions before the milk charge would make waves.

                Even though drinking xeno-boob-juice is super weird.

                So you used to be a vegan? Or you just crashed their forums?

        • PrivateNoob
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          41 year ago

          Yeah I was talking about milks too. Probably it’s relatively easy to supplement milk with other sources but are those choice economically viable? Protein powders are a bit expensive + as an average joe, payin 3x+ more for plant based milk products are bit too much for me currently, but a 2x could convince me to opt for a plant based one. I’m not really knowledgable in this area, there must be some other options too for replacing milk in a cost effective way.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Supplements are cheaper than milk. If the main concern is about d3, you can buy hundreds of high dose d3 supplements for like 10 bucks.

            I’m checking.

            Costco, no sale, 500 iu d3, 600 gels.

            CVS, 5$, 400iu d3 for 100 gels.

            Supplements are pretty available.

            Protein? Meat. Quinoa. Protein is easier and cheaper, but d3 is straightforward and available also.

            • PrivateNoob
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              31 year ago

              Yeah these are good options, though I’m an europoor I believe you, but personally I’m more likely interested in a milk alternative.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                Yeast is the way to look in terms of a realistic cost effective nutritious alternative to milk that tastes and feels similar. I think anyway. Synthesized yeast proteins, acids and fats is a pretty interesting field.

                We can just program yeast to incorporate a certain amount of D3, or whatever other detail of nutrition we care for, within the milk or other substance they produce.

                • PrivateNoob
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                  21 year ago

                  Damn yeast as a viable alternative? Now that was an unexpected one, thank you for the info!

                  • @[email protected]
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                    31 year ago

                    Oh, it’s super cool. Scientists were able to persuade yeasts to produce all sorts of things in small colonies decades ago, but there are actual companies now that the technology has matured that are trying to bring yeast farms into commercial scale. And yeasts are so variable in their strains and productions that you could basically make a yeast produce any combination of protein, fats and acids that you’d like. They’re hoping to synthesize biodegradable plastics, milks, it sounds like nearly anything organic should be able to be synthesized via yeast.

                    Yeah, check it out, yeast farming is super cool.

    • @NocturnalMorning
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      -51 year ago

      We need vitamin D3, and there aren’t that many sources you can get it from.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Most of the useful things in milk are there because we artificially added them in. There is no real reason for this, it’s just what we have been doing for a long time

      • @SuperIce
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        61 year ago

        You can get all the vitamin D you need from just 10-30 minutes midday a few times a week.

        Also, cow’s milk doesn’t naturally contain vitamin D. Vitamin D is added to cow’s milk and is even required by law in some countries (Canada and Sweden). Might as well just drink any milk alternative fortified with vitamin D.

        • @NocturnalMorning
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          41 year ago

          You can get all the vitamin D you need from just 10-30 minutes midday a few times a week.

          Sure, I’m not arguing against that. Just pointing out there aren’t that many sources. And there are a lot of reasons people can’t go outside whenever they want to, biggest one for me is it gets really cold during the winter. No way I’m going outside to hang out when it’s 10 degrees outside.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        If only humans could make their own vitamin D. Oh, wait

        The major natural source of vitamin D is synthesis of cholecalciferol in the lower layers of the epidermis of the skin, through a photochemical reaction of UVB light, from the sun exposure (specifically UVB radiation) or UVB lamps.

        • @NocturnalMorning
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          1 year ago

          Sure you can, but there’s also winter months where you can’t really go outside.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Thanks for pointing that out.

            In the winter, only 10 percent of the body is exposed, and nearly 2 hours of sun exposure at noon is needed to produce a sufficient amount of vitamin D.

            Source

            I thought less time was required.

            • Flying SquidM
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              01 year ago

              So I’m supposed to be outside for two hours in -20 degree weather to get my Vitamin D just so I can survive?

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        There aren’t? Fish right? Isn’t that what fish and fish oil is all about? I think there are plenty of dietary sources of D3 beyond breast milk, if that’s the issue.

        • @NocturnalMorning
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          11 year ago

          Fish and eggs yes. But if you eat fish all the time, you’ll find you have a different issue with mercury poisoning. Sources of vitamin D are low, so some foods and drinks get fortified with vitamin d. It isnt naturally found in anything but fish, beef liver, and egg yolk.

          • @[email protected]
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            01 year ago

            Eat fish oil instead of fish if you’re worried about mercury.

            As for d3 only being found in only a few foods? That can’t be correct.

            Nope, it isn’t.

            But you go on drinking milk if you like, people do lots of weird things.

            • @NocturnalMorning
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              1 year ago

              As for d3 only being found in only a few foods? That can’t be correct.

              Easily googled dude. It is true. Yes, we can also produce it from our skin, but lots of reasons people cant always go outside.

      • enkers
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        1 year ago

        All other mammals not drinking milk past infancy: Am I a joke to you?

        Literally all you need to do is touch grass a few times a week.

        • @[email protected]
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          that’s not a good argument. Other animals doesn’t cook food or wear clothes.

          we do, since both things are older than our species, so we evolved this way. We’d die without cooking and clothes.

          domestic animals and drinking milk are a newer thing, but our species do this weird things all the time.

          that being said, vitamin D can be foud elsewhere lol

          • enkers
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            We have absolutely zero evolutionary need for milk past infancy. It’s all culture and marketing.

            Just because we do those things you mentioned doesn’t mean they’re necessary. In fact, I assure you, neither clothes nor cooking are strictly necessary for an individual’s survival. They’re convenient and comfortable, but not physiologically necessary. Obviously we’d freeze in cold climates, but there are plenty of places on earth we could survive well enough without.

            We do need vitamin D to survive, but you can literally just get it directly from sunlight. The more time you spend inside, and the more thoroughly you clothe yourself, the more likely you are to need to supplement it. Simple as. You only need 30m outside 3x a week (2hrs in winter regions).

            Another funny thing about milk, is that all the natural vitamin A and D is removed in processing. They literally have to re-fortify it again, so the only reason it’s billed as this “healthy” thing is because it’s basically a lab-made liquid vitamin.

            • Flying SquidM
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              31 year ago

              We have absolutely zero evolutionary need for chocolate. It’s all culture and marketing.

              We have absolutely zero evolutionary need for coffee. It’s all culture and marketing.

              We have absolutely zero evolutionary need for beer. It’s all culture and marketing.

              You can apply that to virtually anything we consume that isn’t plants or meat.

              • enkers
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                1 year ago

                Yes, exactly, now you’re getting it! Glad we agree. The entire argument being made here is a purely normative one, not of necessity.

              • enkers
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                06 months ago

                Why are you looking through 7 month old posts for stuff to get mad about? Get a life bruh.

      • @[email protected]
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        Weirder? Sure.

        What gives you the idea that eating animal meat is unintentional?

        I can think of plenty of examples of one animal eating the meat of another, but only one example of a majority of a species drinking the breast milk of another species.

        So yeah, drinking milk seems weirder to me than eating meat.

        • I dont know man. Ants are farming aphids for their sugary digestive secrets aka their shit. Bears eat Honey, which to all logic remains half digested bee-spit. Praying Mantis cut off the head off their mate after mating and eat it. Anglerfish males are not the mighty toothed beasts, but weird little parasites that nist themselves in the females and eat them from the inside until the female just lays its eggs before death.

          So humans drinking other animals milk is maybe unique, but certainly not more weird than other ways of procurung nutrition, that nature invented.

          • @[email protected]
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            I don’t think anyone claimed drinking the breast milk of other species is the weirdest thing on the planet, but I’m not sure your examples quite hit that level, although ants and aphids is a point.

            I guess the counterpoint is that aphid secretions are nontoxic and largely sugar, while humans have fancy coffee that’s made from beans extracted from actual cat s***, and the cat s*** coffee farms are a lot weirder and more gross than an aphid farm.

            But bee honey is just dried out nectar, it isn’t even spit or vomit because there’s no bile or added secretions. It’s just dehydrated flower juice.

            As for the angler fish and praying mantis, that doesn’t seem strange at all with so many ways that evolution and reproduction have evolved.

            Milk isn’t some instinctual thing, humans know where milk comes from, know the cow has to be pregnant, and know which baby animals milk is for, and chose to build an industry around artificially impregnating cows year round, sucking the moo juice from their swollen breasts, taking away their babies after they’re born and processing them for food, then artificially impregnating the agitated mother and sucking more juice out of her for a few years until she’s worthless as a moojuice producer and is moodered for our consumption. Then there’s the hormones that we used for decades and the terrible conditions the animals live in.

            Factory farming, artificial insemination and separating families are choices that we are making to enjoy the elite privilege of drinking the lactation of other species.

            That’s still way weirder to me.

            • Milk isn’t some instinctual thing, humans know where milk comes from, know the cow has to be pregnant, and know which baby animals milk is for, and chose to build an industry around …

              Neither is bread, beer, pizza or any other processed food. Think about it, how weird it is, that humans decided to take seeds, that they cannot digest well and isntead of letting the seeds just seed, they grind them with stones and then they add water and they let it spoil and then they take the spoiled bunch and put it over a fire. And of course it couldnt stop there no! they all started to make it in different ways and when they imagined some standarized symbols they added these symbols together to describe how to do it. And they learned how to breed the seeds so they get more of the white fluffy stuff and they started playing with the dirt to dirigate water to where the seeds grow. And then they noticed the seeds to grow better when they put animal shit on them, so they did that too. And then they used the little symbols they invented, to measure how much seeds each human is growing and how much seeds they need to give to the alpha-humans and some of these alpha humans got so rich with seeds, they built themselves giant gravestones, that are still among the largest buildings to this day.

              You can describe anything that humans did since they stopped slapping bunnies with stone and collecting roots as being super weird. I share your criticism of industrialized farming, but not because it is less or more weird, but because it is detrimental to our survival and well being.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                Breaking things down to their fundamentals isn’t weird, the thing itself is weird.

                No, the development of crops is not weird. Bread is likewise not weird. Capitalism, or the hoarding of resources, is more detrimental to humans than crops or bread, but not very weird.

                Developing an industry around humans harvesting the non-essential lactation of other species meant for animal babies is much weirder than bread.

                Bread - grind seeds, add flour, add water, add heat

                Hunting rabbits - kill rabbit, process meat, add heat

                Potatoes - grow potatoes, harvest potatoes, add heat

                Milk - forcefully inseminate animals, confine the animals in filth, pump them full of chemicals and hormones, secure the cow lactation for the pleasure of the percentage of the human population that can digest cow milk instead of the animal babies it’s intended for, boil the milk because it’s dangerous for humans, kill the baby once it’s born, ignore the bleating and stress of the cow, pump them full of chemicals and hormones, artificially inseminate the cow, repeat

                Milk is definitely weirder.

                • You just arbitrarily define your level of detail.

                  Drinking milk also just started as:

                  try milk from lactating cow - realize you are able to digest it - get more milk from that cow.

                  All the rest that lead to most Europeans being lactose tolerant, which is an insane genetical success story and the subsequent refining of that process came later.

                  But maybe to help you with the seeds: A common way of breeding new seeds, that isnt specific GMO, is to radiate the seeds for random mutation. How is the following process not weird? “apply death ray to seed, get defeberated seed, see if it has any useful properties, crossbreed degenerated seed with less degenerated one until you get your right mix of degeneracy”

                  Or should we go about processing old dinosaur meat into transparent wrappings to buy our cow lactate in? Name it and i can tell you how it is weird. The process is just creative and the result is arbitrary.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    1 year ago

                    You’re literally doing what you’re accusing others of in order to make inorganic sterile processes sound strange.

                    I’m not arbitrarily defining my level of detail, you can break down bread as much as you want and use as many dramatic or inaccurate terms as you like, but bread is never going to be as weird as artificially inseminating chemical hormone pumped eugenics cows so that we can steal their baby juice. I don’t need to make euphemisms or make things sound more dramatic - that’s actually what’s happening.

                    You’re pretending that radiation is weird when it’s literally everywhere constantly, and using the word crossbreeds to falsely equivocate eugenics and hormonal manipulation in higher life forms with retaining the seeds of successful fruiting plants.

                    I understand you’re upset that you can’t make milk less weird, but pushing for grains to be weird is not a winning route for you.

          • @[email protected]
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            51 year ago

            Because you alleged that meat is not something I was intended to eat, which doesn’t really track with the uncountable natural examples of predator and prey for all of knowable history.

            • @[email protected]
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              01 year ago

              Things happening have nothing to do with intentions. Your implication of milk is not intended to be consumed by humans doesn’t track with the history either. We consume milk a fuck ton in various forms over hundreds of years.

              • @[email protected]
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                Of course it tracks - You think that breast milk produced by cows and goats for baby cows and goats specifically is intended for human consumption? No, of course not. That animal breast milk is intended for the young of that species.

                Humans may continue to suckle at the teats of other animals, and it may continue to be common, and it will be weird.

                • @[email protected]
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                  21 year ago

                  That just brings back the question of how’s cow meat is intended to be eaten by you. That muscle is intended to let the cow walk and eat and reproduce. It is specifically evolved for those purposes.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    I don’t think I have the time or inclination to explain the entire history of predator and prey to you, but if you type in those two p-words, you’re going to learn a whole lot about a very long history of carnivores and omnivores eating meat.

                    Carnivores are meat eaters and omnivores eat many things, btw.

                    Humans as a predator, are biologically and historically intended to eat prey, the cow. Or pig, or whatever animal.

                    Look it up, you can choose nearly any animal you are familiar with, and they will fit into the food chain somewhere as an iteration of predator or prey.

                    You have a lot to learn, that’ll be fun for you!