Letters to the Editor

Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
It's a vegan manifesto masquerading as a diet fad. But the only thing this weight-loss book will help you lose is self-esteem.
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  • Heavy handed screed

    Why all the nastiness in this attack? Skinny Bitch is written with wit and a sense of humor, giving excellent information on diet and its ramifications. As for self-esteem, following a vegan diet leads to ethical as well as physical well being.

  • I'm sorry you feel that way

    I always find it funny that what people find to be most upsetting is anything that has to do with food or money. So you didn't like the book, big deal no one's forcing you to do anything. As a 24 year old I found their humor to be sarcastically the same way my friends and I speak to each other. And as a vegan I didn't learn anything new. But I did pass the book on to my husband, best friend and her husband, and sister and her husband who have all made changes to their diets that they are happy with. Fact is I struggled with my weight for a long time before I became vegan. And sure there are overweight vegans but that mostly comes from vegans who aren't sure what to eat and tend to load up on carbs. I wish I had this book when I made the switch it would have made it a whole lot easier. Plain and simple truth is while most people take all vegetarians and vegans to be attacking them in some way if their lifestyle is brought up, I'm still going to go on with what I know to be true. Meat replacements are lower in fat, carbs, cholesterol and sodium. Soy milk is healthier too! (not to mention it doesn't expire as quickly) Lastly as far as it being expensive I spend less money a week now on groceries than I did as a meat eater, honest. And people can turn a blind eye to the meat and dairy industry all day long, and they do! If you "accidently" read what really goes on, which is horrific and brutal and it offends you, GOOD!!! It should be offensive to all of your sensibilities as one of Gods creatures. But instead of taking it out on an author that "tricked" you into reading it, maybe re-evaluate what is really so upsetting which is the common misconception that since animals can't speak they somehow can't feel.

  • Veganism bolsters health and self-esteem

    ...contrary to the author's biased perceptions after reading this book. Shouldn't Klausner have thought twice before picking up a book with a title called "Skinny Bitch?" It's obviously a book with an irreverent view toward body issues. But don't throw the baby out w/ the bath water!

    A healthy vegan diet is not only good for the earth and the animals who don't have to suffer and die needlessly for our palates...it's also good for human health and weight control. I've been vegan for more than a decade and manage my weight effortlessly (partially good genes, but as I get older, I'm sure my diet plays a significant factor in my weight control). Furthermore, while not all vegans are rail thin, few if any are actually obese (in a nation where obesity is fast becoming the norm). It's animal fat that packs on the pounds, whether people want to admit it or not, and animal fat that clogs arteries, raises cholesterol, and increases our risks for many diseases and even cancer.

    Klausner doesn't have to take the skinny bitch's word for it. Research has shown that a healthy vegan diet is the best way to trim down and save the planet while you're at it.

  • Pythagoreans

    Pythagoras (570-470 BC) was born on the island colony of Samos. Historian Dr. Martin A. Larson describes him as “A universal genius...He made important contributions to music and astronomy; he was a metaphysician, a natural philosopher, a social revolutionary, a political organizer, and the universal theologian. He was one of those all-embracing intellects which appears at rare intervals.”

    Pythagoras’ biographer Diogenes Laertius records that he did not “neglect medicine;” his followers contributed to medical wisdom. In the history of religion, Pythagoras was the first person to teach the concepts of reincarnation, heaven and hell to the Western world.

    Diogenes Laertius writes that Pythagoras warned that all who did not accept his teachings would suffer torment in the afterlife, while promising his followers the spiritual kingdom. According to the early Christian father Eusebius: “Pythagoras...declared...that the doctrines which he had received...were a personal revelation to himself from God.”

    Pythagoras was driven from his native Samos in 529 BC when the tyrant Polycrates declared him a subversive. He went to Croton in Italy, established a school of philosophy, and lectured to classes of up to six hundred students. He founded a monastic order that soon became very influential. It was basically a religious sect made up of dedicated saints practicing vegetarianism, voluntary poverty and chastity.

    In less that two decades, the Pythagoreans were numerous and powerful enough to take political power without having to resort to force or violence. History shows that when the Pythagoreans were attacked and massacred in Magna Grecia in 450 BC, they practiced nonviolence and did not resist their aggressors.

    Ancient and modern historians alike acknowledge that Pythagoras was vegetarian. This was the conclusion of Plutarch, Ovid, Diogenes Laertius and Iamblichus in ancient times, and it is the conclusion of scholars today. Nor was vegetarianism loosely connected with the Pythagorean philosophy—it was an integral part of it.

    “Oh, my fellow men!” exclaimed Pythagoras. “Do not defile your bodies with sinful foods. We have corn. We have apples bending down the branches with their weight, and grapes swelling on the vines. There are sweet flavored herbs and vegetables which can be cooked and softened over the fire. Nor are you denied milk or thyme-scented honey. The earth affords you a lavish supply of riches, of innocent foods, and offers you banquets that involve no bloodshed or slaughter.”

    Pythagoras’ meals consisted of honeycomb, millet or barley bread, and vegetables. He would pay fishermen to throw their catch back into the sea. Ironically, he claimed to have been a fisherman in a previous life. He abhorred animal sacrifice and wine, and would only sacrifice cakes, honey, and frankincense to the gods. He revered the altar at Delos because it was free from blood sacrifices. Upon it, he offered flour, meal, and cakes made without the use of fire. Pythagoras would not associate with cooks or hunters.

    According to Iamblichus, Pythagoras taught his followers not to kill even a flea, especially in a temple. He not only showed respect for gods, humans, and animals, but also for the trees, which were not to be destroyed, unless absolutely necessary. It is said Pythagoras pet an eagle, told an ox not to trample a bean field, and fed a ferocious bear barley and acorns, telling it not to attack humans any more.

    Pythagoras not only taught transmigration of the soul, or reincarnation, but even claimed to remember his previous lives. It is said Pythagoras once stopped a man from beating a dog, because in the dog’s yelping he recognized the voice of an old friend. For Pythagoras, killing animals for food meant causing suffering or death to living creatures just as worthy of moral concern as human beings, and who may also have been human in previous lifetimes.

    If souls can transmigrate from one species to another, and all souls are of the same nature, then the unnecessarily killing animals is as morally indefensible as the unnecessary killing of human beings.

    Local tradition says Pythagoras spent time living in a cave on Mount Kerkis in Samos. He was the first person in the history of the world to deduce that the Earth is a sphere. He may have reached this conclusion by comparing the Earth to the Sun and the Moon, or perhaps he noticed the curved shadow of the Earth upon the Moon during a lunar eclipse, or he may have seen that when ships depart and recede over the horizon, their masts disappear last.

    The famous “Pythagorean theorem” is now known to have been mathematical knowledge long before Pythagoras. Square roots and cube roots and the “Pythagorean” theorem are mentioned in the Sulbha Sutras of Bodhayana, in India. (700 BC) Bodhayana also calculated the areas of triangles, circles, trapezoids and determined the value of pi = 3.14136 in measuring and constructing temple altars. Some scholars believe Pythagoras may have received his wisdom from the East.

    What was significant about Pythagoras’ approach, however, was that he did more than list examples of this theorem: he developed a method of mathematical proof of the theorem, based on deduction. Our modern tradition of mathematical proof, the basis for every kind of science, originated in the West with Pythagoras.

    Whereas classical Indian mathematics tended to be intuitive, the Greeks established a tradition of rigorous mathematical proofs. Pythagoras further taught that the world is well-ordered, harmonious, and may be comprehended through human reason. He was the first to use the word “cosmos” to denote a fathomable universe. According to Pythagoras, the laws of nature could be deduced purely by thought.

    During the Renaissance and the age of Enlightenment, Kepler and Newton thought of the world in terms of harmony—the order and beauty of planetary motion and the existence of mathematical laws explaining such motion, and from them came our modern scientific belief that the entire universe can be measured, quantified, and explained in terms of mathematical relationships. These ideas began with Pythagoras. "Chemistry is simply numbers,” said Dr. Carl Sagan, “an idea Pythagoras would have liked.”