- Popular Debates
- Active Debates
- New Debates
- Debate Communities
- Research Feeds
- Argument Waterfall
- New People
- Persuasive People
- Provocative People
- Outspoken People
- Creative People
Your profile reflects your reputation, it will build itself as you create new debates, write arguments and form new relationships.
Make it even more personal by adding your own picture and updating your basics.
| Reward Points: | 2 |
Efficiency: ![]() | 95% |
| Arguments: | 13 |
| Debates: | 0 |
I understand how you are saying that now, humans have other options for protein than meat, but lets think back to ummmm... 8000 BC. The early tribesmen didn't know about protein and soy, they knew that as long as they ate meat and vegetables and fruits and dairy, that they would survive.
Do you think that the first humans who were hunter gatherers could have received the necessary protein they needed to live by just eating vegetables? It wasn't until the introduction of agriculture and science that people said, "I don't need meat, because this plant that is non-native to my area provides enough protein." Also, for all those people who buy these soy burgers that cost twice as much as a regular beef burger because they taste "just like meat", if you want to eat something that tastes like meat, eat meat.
Edit: Humans evolved as omnivores because we could not get all our nutrients from one source such as plants or animals.
The dropping of the atomic bombs was the only reasonable answer to the war. We're lucky we got to Germany so quick, otherwise we would have dropped the bomb on them and then had to invade Japan. America was ready for the war to be over. An invasion would have extended the war 2 years and cost way more lives. At that time, Americans saw the atomic bomb as just another weapon in the US arsenal
|
||||||||||||||
|
About CreateDebate
The CreateDebate BlogTake a Tour Help/FAQ Newsletter Archive |
Sharing Tools
Invite Your FriendsBookmarklets Partner Buttons RSS & XML Feeds |
Reach Out
AdvertiseContact Us Report Abuse |
Basic Stuff
User AgreementPrivacy Policy Sitemap Creative Commons |