Of the total area that is used by humans (Agriculture, Urban and Built-up Land),

  • urban and built-up land is 1m km²,
  • agriculture is 48m km²,

so agriculture is 48 of 49 millions km² used, that’s 98%. The remaining 2% are all streets and housing and other infrastructure together.

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    If we stopped hurting animals we could rewild a lot more land. All that pasture, boom, back to the wild. Then, all the farmland used to grow feed for animals, split it up into what is necessary for human flourishing and then the rest can also go back to the wild.

    That’s the efficient use of land to feed the maximum number of people while maintaining the maximum wild acreage.

    • blarghly@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      If we stopped hurting animals

      So you’re saying “if everyone went vegan/vegetarian…” And I have a lot of doubt about the practical viability of this plan. People have been eating animals longer than we’ve had money or governments… or fire. So I’m betting it would be a bit of a tough habit to break. Development of affordable lab-grown meat could go a long way - but my bet is that there will be subtle (or not so subtle) differences between lab grown and real meat for quite a while, and there would be an indefinite market (maybe luxury, maybe just middle class) for real meat for the forseeable future.

      Hence, rather than relying on people to voluntarily reduce meat consumption (they won’t) or applying heavy-handed and clumsy tactics (banning meat, deciding who or what is worthy of meat and when), we simply apply a price signal and reasonable regulations. The animals live relatively happy lives in reasonable and sanitary conditions. Then one day they wander down a hallway and are popped in the forehead with a bolt, and that’s it. Then the levers of prices can be pulled to gradually push peoples choices in long-term pro-social directions - gradually reducing meat consumption over time in whatever way makes sense to them, while wild land increases and carbon emissions decrease.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        It’s interesting that you think prices are voluntary.

        If meat is too expensive for poor people to eat, then it’s the same as banning poor people from eating meat.

        • blarghly@lemmy.world
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          23 hours ago

          I don’t think I said that? But using price incentives allows people to make the choice between spending their money on the same amount of a now more expensive good, or to change their behavior somehow. Hence, a poor person who previously ate beef every day has a number of options such as eating beef only on certain days of the week, eating a smaller portion of beef each day, or eating a less expensive kind of meat.

          If we recognize that meat production has negative externalities, then to reduce these externalities we need to reduce meat production, which will necessarily reduce meat consumption. Above you seemed to be implying that the ideal solution would be cessation of meat production entirely - which I have to point out, would also result in poor people being unable to eat meat. So, are you defending the right of the poor to eat meat, or do you want to take the meat off their plates?

          Really I assume that what you are getting at is economic fairness, which is not something I bothered mentioning because it didn’t seem relevant to the point I was making. But anyway - pigouvian tax schemes are often paired with social benefits. The government uses the taxes raised to either facilitate the social change it wants to create (eg, using a carbon tax to fund transit improvements) or returns the funds to citizens directly as a dividend which offsets the cost of the increased price of goods (in this case, there would be a break even point somewhere around lower middle class where the dividend recieved would be greater than the increased price of meat).

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            23 hours ago

            Again, price “incentives” are just a ban for poor people. A poor person who can’t afford beef is banned from eating it. It’s basically illegal with extra steps, because they can’t afford to buy it and the only alternatives are illegal.

            If we’re going to ban meat we should apply the ban equally and fairly, instead of just banning poor people.

            • howrar@lemmy.ca
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              11 hours ago

              What’s the argument for having equality of outcome? I don’t think I’ve ever encountered anyone in support of this before.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                11 hours ago

                I covered this in my other replies, but there’s two elements at play.

                The first is that unequal access to food will create resentment, as poor people are forced to cut back or seek alternatives while rich people are unaffected. Resentment leads to resistance, and before you know it you have food riots. People will fight back, and maybe violently, which leads to the second element: high food prices are one of the major causes for government collapse.

                Messing with access to food is the best way to get people to revolt, but in the absence of a revolutionary movement they’re just going to listen to whichever charismatic leader blames the (((NWO globalist agenda))) for taking away meat and uses the nostalgia of “LOOK AT WHAT THEY TOOK FROM YOU” to whip people into a violent frenzy. If you take away their meat, they’ll eat you.

                It has to be fair or it won’t be sustainable.

            • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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              20 hours ago

              “Just because they’re poor doesn’t mean they shouldn’t get the option to contribute to the suffering caused by the meat industry” is the weirdest take I have ever seen on this subject. I’m not sure I disagree, just, I think your priorities may need some examination.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                20 hours ago

                The exact opposite - just because they’re rich doesn’t mean they should get the privilege of eating meat.

                If we’re going to ban meat for poor people then we have to ban it for rich people too.

                • Warl0k3@lemmy.world
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                  19 hours ago

                  No I know what you meant - but this just seems like a “have cake / eat cake” issue. For example: you may have noticed that there are far more poor people than there are rich people. If the goal is to minimize animal suffering and reduce the impact on the climate, banning poor people from eating meat would be a great way to do it.

                  I just don’t think there’s a feasible way to rapidly reduce meat consumption without creating an incidental luxury market, and being concerned about that is (to my mind) almost a parody of equality. Yes, the rich suck. But being forced to tailor a good solution to the incredibly pressing problem just to make sure the rich don’t get to exercise the incredibly vast, nearly all-encompassing privilege they already luxuriate in is an unreasonably large burden to attach to an already almost insurmountable task.

                  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                    19 hours ago

                    There are far more poor people than there are rich people, which is why food prices are common precursors to riots and coups. The idea isn’t feasible because the poor will notice when they are forced to eat beans and rice, while their masters get to have steak. Unfairness breeds resentment. If you want to destabilize society a good way to do it is to make food access even more unequal.

            • blarghly@lemmy.world
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              23 hours ago

              there would be a break even point somewhere around lower middle class where the dividend recieved would be greater than the increased price of meat

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                20 hours ago

                A dividend that presumably pays out during tax returns at the end of the year (anything else would end up overly complicated) is a pipe dream for people living paycheck-to-paycheck, it’s still effectively a ban for people too poor to afford the price hikes. They can’t afford to pay a higher price now and then get a rebate later, they’re just going to be priced out of eating meat entirely.

                • blarghly@lemmy.world
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                  18 hours ago

                  It doesnt seem that complicated. The government gave people free money during covid just fine. Could be a monthly dividend

                  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                    17 hours ago

                    Do remember “paycheck-to-paycheck” is a reality for millions and millions of workers. It would need to be a weekly dividend, either directly added to everyone’s paychecks or direct deposit or just mailed directly. That didn’t happen during COVID, it’d be novel.

                    Then it has other problems: that pool of money is vulnerable to things like government shutdowns, every landlord would raise their rent by the exact amount that the meat rebate pays out, and every grocery store would raise the prices of meat alternatives since the demand would increase. You’d need price controls, rent controls, and fund the meat rebate in a way that couldn’t just be taken away.

                    I don’t hate it, but it’s more complicated than you’re giving credit. If the payout was weekly (and the other concerns were dealt with) it’d effectively be a way to pay people to not eat meat, rather than a way to ban poor people from eating meat. If you didn’t deal with those other problems, especially rent and prices, then it would still effectively be a ban on poor people eating meat because the only way they could afford their higher rents and higher prices is if they saved their meat rebate checks. Like I said, complicated.