but again..have you cut the throat of an animal yourself...?...merle

  
I have been witness to the deaths of many animals and humans: seen the wide 
eyes in terror, smelled the stench, heard the screams, touched the transparent 
skin, tasted the CO2 blown in chain stokes. I also lay in bed at night and 
smell the pond outside my window decay; it is the stench of sweet, beautiful 
death.

--- In [email protected], Merle Lester <merlewiitpom@...> wrote:
>
> each to his own..and have you cut the throat of an animal and heard it squeal 
> glenn?...merle
>  
> Merle
> www.wix.com/merlewiitpom/1
> 
> 
> ________________________________
>  From: Joe <desert_woodworker@...>
> To: [email protected] 
> Sent: Monday, 27 August 2012 10:20 AM
> Subject: [Zen] Re: bone broth
> 
> 
>   
> Glenn,
> 
> One of the Four Noble Truths taught by the Buddha was the reality of 
> ...Suffering.
> 
> Animals suffer: Plants do not (seem to suffer).
> 
> Maybe, some day, plants will be shown to be equally -- however differently -- 
> as sentient as animals.  Then, all vegetarians and vegans will be in some 
> trouble.
> 
> I too am a strict omnivore, Glenn.  But I have been in/gone through  10 or 12 
> year periods of being solely vegetarian, from time to time.
> 
> Things keep changing.  ;-)
> 
> --Joe
> 
> > "Glenn Rogers" <rgthiessen@> wrote:
> >
> > ...why do monastics (and some lay practitioners) defend not eating meat? 
> > They still rely on plants for their survival. [snip]
>


 

Reply via email to