COUNTRIES
WHERE PEOPLE EAT CATS AND DOGS
Scientists suspect the
coronavirus was passed on to humans from animals. Some of the earliest
infections were found in people who had exposure to a wildlife market in the
central city of Wuhan, where bats, snakes, civets and other animals were sold
and later eaten.
The disease has infected more than 1,o0,000 people around the world and
killed some 54,000 of them. Of course most of them hadn’t eaten infested
animals.
In
some parts of the world, eating fluffy cats and dogs is considered perfectly
acceptable and delicious. Dogs and cats
as pets have established a much closer relationship with humans than all other
animals, and the consumption of dogs and cats and other pets is a common
practice in developed countries and in Hong Kong and Taiwan and yes, even in
the United States.
My
wife and I have a at that we truly love and we would never even think of eating
our cat.
Eating
cats and dogs is not only extremely popular in Taiwan but there is a
prolific underground trade supplying strays to local
restaurants and meat vendors across the country. The meat is usually added to
other, more conventional meat dishes for added flavor. For the record, the
government has passed legislation banning the practice, but it still
persists and is very popular, particularly in smaller towns and villages.
Yes,
even in some parts of the U.S. you’ll find people that are completely okay with
eating puppies. There’ve been reports aplenty, in particular, across Hawaii
about people eating stray cats and dogs for years. There are also plenty of
pets that are kidnapped for human consumption. An eight-year-old Labrador named Caddy was recently dog-napped from an equipment shack at a golf
course (where his owner left him while he was teeing off) by local landscape
workers who butchered, cooked and ate
him.
Hawaii’s
house committee recently tried to pass a bill banning the eating of cats and on
the island, but it was shelved because there was too little
concrete, legislative evidence of the practice (meaning that while it does
happen a lot, not everyone goes to jail for it so there aren’t formal records.
It takes the American “hot dog” to a whole new level.
We’re
familiar with the idea of huskies pulling sled teams through the furious snow
drifts of the Poles. The harsh weather conditions make it the sort of place
where certain winter dog breeds thrive and humans couldn’t really get by
without them. Yet, when the going gets particularly tough, the tough get going
all the way to the soup pot. Historically, dogs have been used as an emergency
food source in parts of Siberia, Alaska, northern Canada, and Greenland for
centuries, so it’s really a tried and tested formula I can’t fault anyone doing
that under those circumstances.
As
an aside, years ago, a pilot flew his plane with a female passenger on board
and the plane crashed in the wilds of the Yukon. The woman died and after two months passed, the pilot
was starving so he ate some of the flesh of the dead woman. Even the Pope said
that he did no wrong considering the conditions he was in.
South
Korea the world’s 14th largest economy,
yet every year around 2.5 million dogs are consumed as a “health” food in South Korea. While dog
meat is eaten throughout the year, it is particularly popular in the summer.
Some Koreans believe that eating dog on the warmest days of the
year, known as “Bok Nal,” helps beat the heat. While
animal rights groups are furious about the trend (the animals are usually
electrocuted, beaten, or hanged to death) the sale of dogs for food is a $2
billion a year industry in the country.
Dogs
were bred for their meat by the Aztecs. For hundreds of years, eating dog meat
has been a staple of the culinary culture of the region. In some parts of
Mexico, the practice is still going strong, particularly among the homeless,
very poor, and destitute.
Cat
and dog meat, a longstanding culinary tradition in many parts of Asia, can be
found on plenty of menus across China. In southern Chinese cities like
Guangzhou, dogs are kept in holding pens and supplied to restaurants for a
variety of menu items like dog hot pot, dog soup, and dog steak. They say, "Dog
meat is good for your health and metabolism."
Shenzhen has
become the first Chinese city to ban the sale and consumption of dog and cat
meat.
The ruling is a tougher version of China's ban of wildlife meat, after it was linked to the It to the coronavirusvirus
outbreak which was was linked to wildlife meat, prompting the government to ban the trade and consumption of wild animals. Shenzhen even went a step further, extending the ban to dogs and cats.
Thirty million dogs a year are
killed across Asia for meat, says Humane Society International However, the
practice of eating dog meat in China is not that common since the majority of
Chinese people have never done so and say they don't want to do it.
"Dogs and cats as pets
have established a much closer relationship with humans than all other animals,
and banning the consumption of dogs and cats and other pets is a common
practice in developed countries and in Hong Kong and Taiwan," the Shenzhen
city government said, according to a Reuters report
"This really could be a
watershed moment in efforts to end this brutal trade that kills an estimated 10
million dogs and 4 million cats in China every year," said Dr Peter Li,
China policy specialist for HSI.
There
have long been cats and dogs in Tahiti
and other Polynesian islands, and they were used as a food source like
any other for hundreds of years. Then the Europeans arrived in 1769 with their
ideas that cats and dogs were really loveable household pets that shouldn’t be
turned into stew. Yet the practice persists, particularly when there’s not
enough meat available for more plebian fare. Even Captain Cook and his men were
reported to have eaten dog meat when they first arrived at Tahiti.
The
practice of eating cat and dog meat is surprisingly common amongst farmers in
Switzerland. They preferred doggy meat is a relation to the Rottweiler, which
is apparently quite “beefy” and a favorite in rural portions of the cantons of
Appenzell and St. Gallen, among others. Consumption is also quite popular in
the Rhine Valley. And dog lard is sometimes used in Switzerland for medicinal
purposes While eating cats and dogs is
not illegal in Switzerland, the animals are still required to be killed
humanely.
Every
year thousands of stray cats and dogs are snatched up from the streets of Ho
Chi Minh City and sold to local restaurants and street food vendors. The demand
for dog meat is, in fact, so high that it’s the center of a very lucrative black-market
trade. Dog meat can sell for around $10
per kilogram (just under $5 a pound) and is used for dishes like dog stew,
served warm in a soup of blood. Other dishes served are barbecued dog with
lemongrass and ginger, steamed dog with shrimp-paste sauce, and skewered dog,
marinated in chiles and coriander.
I do
not want to eat cats or dogs or for that matter worms or insects.
I like Chinese food providing the meat isn’t hat of cats or dogs or
worms or insects.
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