Slick wrote: Tue Oct 26, 2021 12:01 pm That’s fucking mad, makes the presenter and TalkRadio look like idiots
They doubled down on it too

Slick wrote: Tue Oct 26, 2021 12:01 pm That’s fucking mad, makes the presenter and TalkRadio look like idiots
Yeah but more obviously extreme as it's Murdoch owned. It's the sister channel of talkSPORT.sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Oct 26, 2021 8:15 pm Christ, I only managed a minute of that before the smugness and complete absence of self-awareness became too much to bear.
Funny thing about words, is that their multiple meanings are often inextricably linked to their contextual usage. When someone's talking abou growing trees, saying you can grow concrete is moronic.
This is my first exposure to talkRADIO, is it basically the radio equivalent of GB news? That's how this whole episode makes them seem.
Settle down.Line6 HXFX wrote: Wed Oct 27, 2021 12:35 pm Gawd, the English are cunts.
Piggish, plump, knee deep in the blood of the poor, sick and unemployed, punchibg down cunts.
These are your guys England.
Not making this nationalistic, but has any civilised society on the planet produced this amount of unashamed wank?
Line6 HXFX wrote: Wed Oct 27, 2021 12:35 pm Gawd, the English are cunts.
Piggish, plump, knee deep in the blood of the poor, sick and unemployed, punching down cunts.
These are your guys England.
Not trying to make this nationalistic, and make you all rush to the defence of these creatures..but has any civilised society on the planet produced this amount of unashamed, right wing, gammon wank?
What the fuck is it with you lot?
How do you look at Jeremy Kyle and not recognise him for every bit of the cunt he is?
I suppose we should applaud him for his effort in reducing his motorcade to about 20 cars and buses, rather than the 85 he required in Rome.Paddington Bear wrote: Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:33 am Are we really going to stand here and pretend that Biden was going to take the bus?
He's the most powerful man in the world and has a security detail to match.Lobby wrote: Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:41 amI suppose we should applaud him for his effort in reducing his motorcade to about 20 cars and buses, rather than the 85 he required in Rome.Paddington Bear wrote: Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:33 am Are we really going to stand here and pretend that Biden was going to take the bus?
Erdogan didn't attend because the Brits wouldn't let him have a security detail as big as Biden's.Paddington Bear wrote: Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:51 amHe's the most powerful man in the world and has a security detail to match.Lobby wrote: Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:41 amI suppose we should applaud him for his effort in reducing his motorcade to about 20 cars and buses, rather than the 85 he required in Rome.Paddington Bear wrote: Tue Nov 02, 2021 8:33 am Are we really going to stand here and pretend that Biden was going to take the bus?
So, I understand where they're coming from and broadly agree, but from an environmental point of view the uplands were for the most part fully forested before they were used for sheep farming. So their importance in carbon sequestration and storage, if not used for farming, is positive. Land use isn't just food production.weegie01 wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 8:50 am My wife's family have been hill farmers for generations. They are among many farmers who bridle at the suggestion that stopping eating meat will help solve global warming. One of the key points they make is that if they were not growing sheep and cattle in the hills, no food would be coming out from that ground at all. The calories they generate would have to be replaced by calories imported from elsewhere, which means more land elsewhere will have to be given over to arable farming. And since there is no good arable land left just lying around, that means more habitat destruction.
So one set of relations made this video to give people a bit more of an idea of where (some of) their food comes from.
Fun fact. I was at school with Mary McCall Smith who is featured. Her uncle is Alexander McCall Smith.
Hydroponics and other indoor systems are a growing part of agriculture. But they are enormously capital intensive, and whilst they will have an increasing role in the agricultural future, they are no panacea.Guy Smiley wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 1:17 pm You could grow more food indoors using hydroponics and grow lights using less energy and effort for greater profitability...
but grazin's what we know and we're quite happy doin' it thankye
Sheep farming did not drive deforestation, it took advantage of it. Over half Scotland's forest were gone before the Romans got here. By the time the Clearances came along, most of the rest was also gone. The sheep that came after just replace the people and their communal farms.Biffer wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 12:53 pmSo, I understand where they're coming from and broadly agree, but from an environmental point of view the uplands were for the most part fully forested before they were used for sheep farming. So their importance in carbon sequestration and storage, if not used for farming, is positive. Land use isn't just food production.weegie01 wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 8:50 am My wife's family have been hill farmers for generations. They are among many farmers who bridle at the suggestion that stopping eating meat will help solve global warming. One of the key points they make is that if they were not growing sheep and cattle in the hills, no food would be coming out from that ground at all. The calories they generate would have to be replaced by calories imported from elsewhere, which means more land elsewhere will have to be given over to arable farming. And since there is no good arable land left just lying around, that means more habitat destruction.
So one set of relations made this video to give people a bit more of an idea of where (some of) their food comes from.
Fun fact. I was at school with Mary McCall Smith who is featured. Her uncle is Alexander McCall Smith.
Not disagreeing with the thrust of it, but if you reduce meat consumption, in most cases you reduce the amount of land required to feed the population. Highland sheep farming is one of very few exceptions to this.weegie01 wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 2:29 pmSheep farming did not drive deforestation, it took advantage of it. Over half Scotland's forest were gone before the Romans got here. By the time the Clearances came along, most of the rest was also gone. The sheep that came after just replace the people and their communal farms.Biffer wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 12:53 pmSo, I understand where they're coming from and broadly agree, but from an environmental point of view the uplands were for the most part fully forested before they were used for sheep farming. So their importance in carbon sequestration and storage, if not used for farming, is positive. Land use isn't just food production.weegie01 wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 8:50 am My wife's family have been hill farmers for generations. They are among many farmers who bridle at the suggestion that stopping eating meat will help solve global warming. One of the key points they make is that if they were not growing sheep and cattle in the hills, no food would be coming out from that ground at all. The calories they generate would have to be replaced by calories imported from elsewhere, which means more land elsewhere will have to be given over to arable farming. And since there is no good arable land left just lying around, that means more habitat destruction.
So one set of relations made this video to give people a bit more of an idea of where (some of) their food comes from.
Fun fact. I was at school with Mary McCall Smith who is featured. Her uncle is Alexander McCall Smith.
I am planting trees. I see the need and advantages in doing so. But the point still stands, if land is taken out of food production for trees, the food has to be substituted from elsewhere. And as the world is now, that probably means deforestation elsewhere.
What I rail against is the simplistic panaceas put forward and latched onto. There is a whole range of inter-related actions required to both feed the planet, and reduce our carbon footprint while doing so.
I have no issue at all with the idea that we in the west should reduce our meat consumption. We all eat more than we need, and many people eat fat, far more than they need.Biffer wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 2:35 pmNot disagreeing with the thrust of it, but if you reduce meat consumption, in most cases you reduce the amount of land required to feed the population. Highland sheep farming is one of very few exceptions to this.
Yeah, it’s horrendously complex.weegie01 wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 4:57 pmI have no issue at all with the idea that we in the west should reduce our meat consumption. We all eat more than we need, and many people eat fat, far more than they need.Biffer wrote: Sat Apr 09, 2022 2:35 pmNot disagreeing with the thrust of it, but if you reduce meat consumption, in most cases you reduce the amount of land required to feed the population. Highland sheep farming is one of very few exceptions to this.
However, there is a far more complex relationship between livestock farming and land use than most realise.
The Highlands are a long way from being the exception. As a sweeping generalisation, globally poor land is used for grazing, land that is fertile enough for arable farming to provide food into the human food chain is used for that. There is a reason why, in the Scottish example, there is barely a fence in huge areas of East Lothian, Angus etc, and that is simply that it is the best farmland so there are no animals. Livestock farms appear as you get to the poorer soils.
At the two extremes we have the fertile land used to grow crops for human consumption, then at the other vast areas of the world where crops are impossible so livestock is farmed. The first can be used for either livestock or arable but is only ever used for arable, the second can only ever be used for livestock. There is a reason that in many areas of the world ranches / stock farms are in measured in 10s if not 100s of thousands of acres, and that is that the need to be that big due to the poor quality of the land.
The interesting bit is the land in between.
Only about half the arable land produces food for human consumption. About 10% goes for biofuel, the rest for animal feed. I think it is something like 12 vegetable calories fed to an animal to produce one beef calorie. The obvious solution is to stop feeding so much to animals and use it for humans as we'd get 12 times as many calories.
Except that a lot of the feed fed to animals is too poor quality to go into the human food chain. Everything is a continuum so I am sure it is possible to convert or adapt the better quality fairly easily to the human food chain, but for the really poor quality stuff, at the moment the best way to do this is by feeding it animals.
So in summary, let's come up with a solution that makes the best use of all land in terms of the calories it can produce, which in more case than people seem to realise will be by livestock farming, though in all likelihood less than today.
Never truer word spoken !