I know you are not talking to me here but, FWIW, I haven't been offended by what you've said because much of the personal stuff was rubbish. I think that your technique of making broad assumptions about someone's ideals/morality/ego is misguided because you cannot really know anything about those things based on brief interaction on a forum. On the other hand, I know that I have criticised what you have written here. That I can do and that only because it is all I know of you. The basis of much of your fcomments about people here are based on your imagination. At least I have the vague solidity of your written word to base my criticism on.
wow, hypocrisy is strong within this one, can't I say the same thing? Oh, wait, you have based your criticisms if my words even though you admitted to only reading selected portions of what I wrote and continue to ignore any clarifications.
You've consistently lumped all vegetarians/vegans together to make criticisms of. At this point, you are either lying, are delusional, or assume I am lying. So, I will no longer engage your childishness. How nice of you to continue to waste my time with empty rhetoric? I will no longer engage strawmen. There is an inherent illogic in doing that, rendering a lot (not all) of your conclusions invalid. I personally don't agree with Murphy's take on this topic, nor do I agree with Ninae's idea's. That's 3 non-meat eaters who don't see eye-to-eye. Vegeterians/vegans are as diverse a group as any. Overlooking that fact would lead anyone to the mistaken views that you've come to.
You haven't been logically consistent. Point in case, you did it above, claiming to have "done nothing but praise vegetarians". It follows that those in opposition to you have been unreasaonable and irrational in determining that you don't respect vegetarianism and you would then be correct in feeling like a victim of injustic. Yet your first post describes this diet as a 'high horse'. That doesn't sound at all like praise really. It sounds like veiled antagonism, which you've gone on to aptly demonstrate, so to act shocked or dismayed at this unwarranted opposition is disingenuous and illogical.
The generalisation that you did earlier is another example of a logical fallacy. (BTW, logic isn't totally infallible and there is room for illogic. But your claims to it need to be honestly examined).
I think you missed my point in my OP when I mentioned 'alternative lifestyle choices'. I wasn't talking about alternatives to meat eating, I was talking about other less mainstream lifestyle choices. The thread ended up being entirely about vegetarianism/veganism though.
I've never really considered the possibility of the entire human population giving up meat*. But if it was to happen, yes it would be disastrous if enacted immediately. The problems you've raised with it (ie. what to do with the huge population of now useless animals) is moot if this new diet was introduced globally over, say, a generation or 50 years. The land used to both house livestock and growing food for them could be gradually repurposed to grow food for humans.
*I would never ever support this. I am against the state trying to impose any lifestyle upon anyone, and I would really fight against imposed vegetarianism. Slippery slope IMO.