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false dichotomy
Well, I didn't want to mention the possibility that you're ill-informed, missusing unapplicable or segment specific information and/or oversimplifying things, since I didn't want to be unpleasant, and I have serious doubts that the book I mentioned was wrong in that since I have yet to see anything disproving it (quite the contrary, it has been lauded as an exposée of industrial farming in the US).
But yeah, there are indeed more possible explanation than merelly the ones I posited in my previous post.
when did you read your 20-year-old book last? are you sure you're remembering it correctly? are you sure it's still accurate?
Well, that's why one of the two possibilities I posited in my original post which you identified as a false dichotomy, was exactly that things might have changed since I read that book.
I remember that specific part very clearly because it was so shocking for me as an European, but indeed as we both mentioned, things might not be the same anymore, which is why I very explicitly mentioned in post that exactly caveat.
you never quoted the relevant section. i don't think it says what you're implying: that most cattle eat mostly corn. if it does, then it was never correct.
there's also the possibility you are doing this (even if you don't know it)
Indeed.
Which is why I explicitly mentioned my reference source and even pointed out things have changed in the meanwhile, and why in general I have tried to refrain from making absolutist "I know it all" statements.
I'm well aware of not being a domain specialist.
but you couldn't help but be condescending.
Ponder on how your post with just "false dichotomy" and nothing else is going to be read by other people who are so far engaging your points in good faith and have been quite open about were what they're saying comes from and how they might be wrong.
Then ponder on what they will think about you from that point onwards and hence how they will engage you (if they care to engage you at all) after that specific response of yours in that specific style.
Consider the possibility that the way other treat you reflects how you treat others.
being confident (and right) is not being condescending.
... i'm good with it.
my source comes from the oklahoma state agricultural extension. i doubt your book contradicts them, but if it does, then i'm going to trust the university over michael polan's 2-decades old research.