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Is eating dog any different than pork? Shocking Article that will make you think!

Whoa, I was taken aback when I read this article just now. I hope this doesn't offend anyone, and am sorry if it does, but I just couldn't help but see how others react to this.

 

The author sort of has a point. Why should puppy meat be any different then eating lamb? I have toyed with the idea of vegetarianism in the past but have never thought seriously about it. This article really left me feeling nautious about eating meat. Maybe I should give it a shot? I wonder how many DK members are vegetarian... 

 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/the-hot-button/puppy-meat-no-di... 

 

Puppy meat no different than pork, celebrity chef argues

Globe and Mail Blog





| Getty Images/iStockphoto

You take a turn past the free-range chicken breast display and organic grass-fed beef ribs and approach the butcher's counter for the cut you're really interested in: succulent, organic canine brisket.

Just think: it would make a great pot roast for tonight and you'd have leftovers for the kids' lunches tomorrow.


Does the thought of puppy sandwiches trigger your gag reflex or bring a sympathetic tear to your eye? Well, British celebrity chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall says if you eat other types of meat, you should get a grip. He says he'd have no problems with a "high-welfare organic puppy farm," according to the Guardian.

"You can't object, unless you object to the farming of pigs," he says.

Mr. Fearnsley-Whittingstall wouldn't eat dog steak himself (he's recently become a vegetarian) but took the controversial stance to point out the hypocrisy among meat eaters who are happy to eat animals traditionally raised as livestock but are vehemently opposed to eating those raised as pets.

Our culture's opposition to eating puppies is based on a shaky foundation, he argues. At some point, we decided dogs would make great household companions and pigs (and cows and chickens) would be raised on farms and then grilled, fried and baked.

Surprise, surprise: not everyone's a fan of his stance.

A spokesman from the RSPCA told the Daily Mail, "...His comments may seem sensible but are actually quite controversial - especially when dogs are our most popular and loved pet."

Blogs reporting on the news have resorted to posting requisite photos of too-cute-for-words puppies to tug at our heartstrings.

But when dogs are cut up by a butcher (as is the case with pigs, cows and chickens) it's easier to get into a different head space about them, as this online puppy butcher proves. The butcher also doesn't identify what breed the meat comes from, all in an effort to make people separate "dogs as pets" from "dogs as dinner."

"We breed extra large, large, medium, small and extra small dogs in the one breed. This breed is not available as a pet which depersonalizes the Puppy Beef process. You wouldn't eat your pet lamb so we take a similar approach," they explain in their FAQ.

In Canada, dog meat is perfectly legal to serve at a restaurant - it just has to be properly inspected first.

If you eat other kinds of meat, would you ever chow down some baby back beagle ribs?

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I like meat but of late I eat much less of it due to the fact that I'm eating vegetables like, well really, a rabbit : )I'll try different foods as long as they do not entail raw meat or fish, or utterly make me ill at the idea of whatever it is. I like all meat and fish very dead as I say, meaning well done.
F, We have so much more in common than just our Mensa minds. I cook all my meat until it is as my DH likes to say "crispy." I always tell him to cook my meat on the grill until he thinks it is done and then 20 more minutes. He likes his stuff rare and I really can hardly watch him eat it. We must meet someday for a salad :)
Would love to do that!
When I told my husband I said we both have Mensa minds...he said, "Hokum!" I am pretty sure he was talking about me and not you :)
What a guy!!!
I did not know that dog meat was legal to serve in Canada.. Geeze.. Yuck.. I can't read the article. I am a hypocrite totally and I know it.
me neither until now. double yuck!
If you read the legal aspect to the link this was stated by a inspector in Alberta that it is not "illegal" to serve canine as long as the meat is prepared properly and INSPECTED....there are no facilities anywhere in Canada that inspect dog meat.
Dh ate dog in China!  It was NOT his choice though - a really mean Chinese guy, that is jealous of my dh - did the ordering for a group of people at a company dinner.  There were 2 or 3 Americans who of course don't understand the language and had no clue what was ordered.  The other Chinese people were not going to rock the boat and say anything.  Dinner is family style so they were all eating out of several large platters.  Thankfully dh only had a bite or two and didn't take anymore, and of course evil guy made sure to tell the Americans AFTER the dinner.  Big joke - not --- just bigger @$$hole.
omg, i just threw up a little in my mouth!
My brother works in China, thought he was eating eggplant said 'yum yum.'  his Korean pilot friends said "you very brave man", 'why' said my brother.  You eating Sea Cucumber!
What's wrong with that?

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