And yet India is one of the countries where heavy deforestation takes place. There people from different religions who follow their own food ethics. Religion is belief system and cannot scientifically be proven. But saying that hunters tend to be meat eaters and farmers tend to be vegetarians is a generally and widely known and accepted fact.
It has historical weightage which acts as proof. Where as religion has know proof but a passed down system of belief. Even today you can see hunters in different parts of the world where hunting is legal who prefer to eat meat. Any such act born out of a particular belief system is therefore flawed. Besides meat was staple food for hunters where arable land was not available. They were only able to get arable land after progress and deforestation.
So the real question is not whether who eats meat or not. The true question is should human beings exist on this planet or not? Should they? To add to the earlier comment books are food for the mind and beef is food for the body. In conjunction to the comment about trees being similar to cows in their uses and so on. Unbiased, unprejudiced, fair. Because every life is valuable. What do you say mam. Many Writers and Poetic giving back their awards for killing muslims.
I believe killing of any animal is bad but since we worship God in India its even more worse eating cow. Being a vegetarian I can understand the blind idiocy of these meat eating types.
A new heaven and new earth using the upcoming robotic leisure to work with light to uplift nature. Maybe society should pay attention to what God and heaven wants, not their apelike materialistic views of calculated greed and animal rationalization with Gone with the Wind and Gay sex etc. Time to move forwards past these hypocrites. Hi, it has been a great issue in the recent years about eating beef in India.
I hope it is not same everywhere over there and environment is good at most of the places. I am from Kerala, there is no cow slaughter act here. We should consider cow as a symbol of life. So I am agree with you. I want to eat better and feel better. The court has struck it down after finding it unconstitutional and in violation of the Right to Life. The court has said when a person procures beef from a place where it is legal to consume and possess beef, the law cannot prohibit him from eating it here.
It said people needed to be given their privacy and choice, especially when their choice of food is not injurious to health. Though the court commented on the absurdity of disallowing this, it has not struck it down.
There is a provision in the beef ban law restricting people from transporting bovine animals outside the state with the knowledge that it will be slaughtered. Therefore, the ban on transporting cows, bulls and bullocks for the purpose of slaughter will remain. It will be tough for police to verify and check if meat seized by them is of an animal slaughtered in Maharashtra or outside especially now that the onus is on the police to prove the guilt of someone found in possession of beef.
In any crime that takes place, it is traced to where it started. When a citizen buys beef in Mumbai from a dealer who procured it from, say, Goa or Kerala, it will be legitimate as long as the buyer has proof it is from outside state limits. Two Indian states recently tightened laws banning cow slaughter and the sale and consumption of beef. The ban provoked immense outrage on social media with many questioning the government's right to decide what is on their plate.
It was also criticised by many as beef is cheaper than chicken and fish and forms the staple for the poorer Muslim, tribal and dalit formerly untouchable communities. In the absence of a federal law governing cow slaughter, individual states have placed different levels of restrictions. The strongest laws on cow-slaughter are in place in the north, central and western parts of India. Eleven states and two union territories federally-administered regions ban slaughter of cows, calves, bulls and bullocks.
The central state of Chhattisgarh does not even allow the slaughter of buffaloes, even though they are not considered sacred. Eight states and four union territories in eastern and southern India have laws that ban the slaughter of cows and calves, but allow bulls, bullocks and buffaloes to be killed as long as they have a "fit for slaughter" certificate.
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