Based on the chart at this address, my two cats (one of them 19 lbs) probably add up to an Eco-Footprint similar to an SUV. [The chart can't be hot-linked.]
I do feel guilty about the carbon footprint of my beloved feline family members.
The number of Americans who admit that they suffer from environmentally related "green guilt" has more than doubled in the past three years, according to a new survey. Environmental experts define green guilt as the knowledge that you could and should be doing more to help preserve the environment. Today it affects nearly one-third (29 percent) of Americans.
Tags: pets, sustainability
Permalink Reply by Natalie A Sera on July 29, 2012 at 1:00am Well, so I shouldn't feel guilty about my cats. And I refuse to feel "green guilty", because the real issue is overpopulation. If we weren't so overpopulated, we could eat all the fish we wanted to, and the seas would still be healthy, and the fossil fuels would not be running out, and we could have cities and technology without using up all the resources of the world. While it is true that Americans use more resources than poor countries, the poor countries are producing most of the children, who, if they grow up at all, will just produce more and more children. And don't think for a minute that they wouldn't choose OUR lifestyle if they could! So it's a double-edged sword, and unless we attack it from both sides, we're doomed.
Permalink Reply by Prog Rock Girl on March 12, 2013 at 7:10pm I wonder how the eco-footprint of adopting a cat compares to bringing a human baby into this world.
I knew about the footprints on my heart...
Permalink Reply by Kylyssa Shay on July 30, 2012 at 4:15pm
Permalink Reply by Ruth Anthony-Gardner on July 30, 2012 at 4:28pm Composting sounds quite intimidating. It'd require a lot more work. Guess I'm not quite ready to bite that bullet.
Thanks for pointing out a likely problem with the methodology: waste meat doesn't use grain, water, etc. that isn't already being used to raise meat for human consumption.
Unfortunately the New Scientist article about Robert and Brenda Vale's book is behind a paywall.
Natalie is right that the root problem here is human overpopulation (not helped, btw, by those religions whose arsenal of survival and market-share tricks includes a "be fruitful and multiply" teaching!).
Permalink Reply by Ruth Anthony-Gardner on March 14, 2013 at 12:51pm Keep in mind that "waste" meat keeps changing. Pink slime is now a routine part of our food chain. Horse and donkey meat work their way into so called beef products. As climate change and overpopulation create more severe protein shortages, I suspect that the definition of waste meat will shift even more drastically.
Karim R. commented on Two Cult Survivor's blog post My first funeral as an atheist
Mr Peterdactyl replied to matthew greenberg's discussion Pope Francis says even Atheists go to Heaven
Mathew T. replied to Jessica's discussion Just an interesting observation
Glenn Friedman commented on Yvette's group California Atheists
Mr Peterdactyl liked matthew greenberg's discussion Pope Francis says even Atheists go to Heaven
MB replied to Loren Miller's discussion Latest Activity?
Ruth Anthony-Gardner replied to Joan Denoo's discussion Climate hits 400ppm of CO2 for first time in 3 million years in the group Climate Concerns© 2013 Atheist Nexus. All rights reserved. Admin: Richard Haynes.

