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fratsarerats [none/use name]

fratsarerats@hexbear.net
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Conducting research like this is always very hard, but those numbers are hilariously wrong.

So what are the numbers then? All the sources I see place it below 50%.

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Did you even read the next line I wrote or just popped off?

Yeah I get it, you don’t want to debate. I don’t either, I just want to know what the numbers are. You said that what I cited was “hilariously wrong” but then left it at that. Help me out a little.

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I’m so glad people here feel this way. In my experience even the most progressive people suddenly turn into some kinda weird traditionalists when it comes to child support. I think there was a thread a while back that got nuked cuz of this (b/c the person suggested that the state take care of children instead of putting the burden on a parent that didn’t want the child). It seems the opinion has changed tho, thank god.

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Wow that is a SOLID material analysis. Someone should make that into a pinned post. Kudos to the original commenter.

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I remember when some on here were unironically doing the “you gotta hand it to him” for this BS that was obviously never gonna go anywhere from the start…

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Uh didn’t ancient Egypt still have pretty “traditional” gender roles? Not sure what this meme is trying to say

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Most of India has been vegetarian for thousands of years. If meat was “essential”, they’d be dead.

I don’t know about “thousands of years” as in Vedic India meat was definitely consumed and animal sacrifices were performed for religious ceremonies:

In the time of the oldest Hindu sacred text, the Rig Veda (c. 1500 B.C.), cow meat was consumed. Like most cattle-breeding cultures, the Vedic Indians generally ate the castrated steers, but they would eat the female of the species during rituals or when welcoming a guest or a person of high status.

Ancient ritual texts known as Brahmanas (c. 900 B.C.) and other texts that taught religious duty (dharma), from the third century B.C., say that a bull or cow should be killed to be eaten when a guest arrives.

https://theconversation.com/hinduism-and-its-complicated-history-with-cows-and-people-who-eat-them-80586

Even in modern day India the number of pure vegetarians doesn’t constitute the majority:

If you go by three large-scale government surveys, 23%-37% of Indians are estimated to be vegetarian. By itself this is nothing remarkably revelatory.

But new research by US-based anthropologist Balmurli Natrajan and India-based economist Suraj Jacob, points to a heap of evidence that even these are inflated estimations because of “cultural and political pressures”. So people under-report eating meat - particularly beef - and over-report eating vegetarian food.

Taking all this into account, say the researchers, only about 20% of Indians are actually vegetarian - much lower than common claims and stereotypes suggest.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-43581122

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I think more restrictions and involving criminal systems is more likely to hurt than help. Affect this by way of social stigmatization, not legality.

Yeah it’s funny seeing some here getting all “tough on crime” when it comes to this issue

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Also ancient Romans, just like ancient Greeks, had a long tradition of materialism as well. Plato always had people criticizing his idealism, and this continued into the Roman tradition as well.

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