Is food a basic human right? Should it be?
Or is the right to have access to adequate nutrition a subset of the right to life?
Or is the right to have access to adequate nutrition a subset of the right to life?
Last edited by KEN-JENNINGS (2007-05-16 11:17:53)
Enough calories and sufficient healthiness of food to keep you alive & fit.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
To me adequate nutrition is the Sausage McMuffin w/ Egg I had about an hour ago. Define adequate in this context.
Last edited by apollo_fi (2007-05-16 11:20:17)
Last edited by topal63 (2007-05-16 11:22:46)
I would answer 'yes' to both questions.topal63 wrote:
Is air a basic human right? Should it be?
Or is the right to have access to an air-supply a subset of the right to life?
Yeah, I agree. Still, no better hangover cure than a McMuffin.apollo_fi wrote:
Enough calories and sufficient healthiness of food to keep you alive & fit.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
To me adequate nutrition is the Sausage McMuffin w/ Egg I had about an hour ago. Define adequate in this context.
The McMuffin satisfies the first condition.
Stop eating that McStuff, it'll kill you.
Urrrggggh!KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
To me adequate nutrition is the Sausage McMuffin w/ Egg I had about an hour ago. Define adequate in this context.
Yes, though.
Yes there is. Full English breakfast with tea and orange juice.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Yeah, I agree. Still, no better hangover cure than a McMuffin.
Last edited by Bertster7 (2007-05-16 11:32:14)
Never had it, and I don't really like tea. Does it give you a sugar/fat high like aforementioned McMuffin?Bertster7 wrote:
Urrrggggh!KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
To me adequate nutrition is the Sausage McMuffin w/ Egg I had about an hour ago. Define adequate in this context.
Yes, though.Yes there is. Full English breakfast with tea and orange juice.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Yeah, I agree. Still, no better hangover cure than a McMuffin.
It is not a right it is a need.apollo_fi wrote:
Spam, spam, spam.
Would you give up your McMuffins, stale beans, greasy sausages, limp bacon, tea etc. to guarantee the global availability of the basic human right of food?
Last edited by topal63 (2007-05-16 12:04:26)
Erm...topal63 wrote:
It is not a right it is a need.apollo_fi wrote:
Spam, spam, spam.
Would you give up your McMuffins, stale beans, greasy sausages, limp bacon, tea etc. to guarantee the global availability of the basic human right of food?
Air is a need.
Water is a need.
Education is a need.
Engineering a clean-water system, to maintain the water-supply is a need.
Solving the world hunger problem and the real needs of the suffering; is not something so easily solved.
Even more so. But it actually tastes good and is made of food instead of McFood - which is different and inferior.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Never had it, and I don't really like tea. Does it give you a sugar/fat high like aforementioned McMuffin?Bertster7 wrote:
Urrrggggh!KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
To me adequate nutrition is the Sausage McMuffin w/ Egg I had about an hour ago. Define adequate in this context.
Yes, though.Yes there is. Full English breakfast with tea and orange juice.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Yeah, I agree. Still, no better hangover cure than a McMuffin.
No.apollo_fi wrote:
Spam, spam, spam.
Would you give up your McMuffins, stale beans, greasy sausages, limp bacon, tea etc. to guarantee the global availability of the basic human right of food?
OK... but all of the rights stated in the UN declaration of human rights surely meet a human need.topal63 wrote:
Solving the world hunger problem and the real needs of the suffering; is not something so easily solved. You cannot just call it (or redefine a need as) a right, and then guarantee that everyone will survive and have access to a food supply or clean water supply. This potentially reduces what it is to be human to what is to be an animal.
You can't just throw food, like feed at cattle, and expect the problem to be solved.apollo_fi wrote:
OK... but all of the rights stated in the UN declaration of human rights surely meet a human need.topal63 wrote:
Solving the world hunger problem and the real needs of the suffering; is not something so easily solved. You cannot just call it (or redefine a need as) a right, and then guarantee that everyone will survive and have access to a food supply or clean water supply. This potentially reduces what it is to be human to what is to be an animal.
You'll have to clarify the statement that guaranteed access to food and clean water potentially reduces humans to farm animals a bit. What do you mean?
Do you see where I am going with this...apollo_fi wrote:
Erm...topal63 wrote:
It is not a right it is a need.apollo_fi wrote:
Spam, spam, spam.
Would you give up your McMuffins, stale beans, greasy sausages, limp bacon, tea etc. to guarantee the global availability of the basic human right of food?
Air is a need.
Water is a need.
Education is a need.
Engineering a clean-water system, to maintain the water-supply is a need.
Solving the world hunger problem and the real needs of the suffering; is not something so easily solved.
Breathing is a need, satisfied by air.
Thirst is a need, satisfied by water.
The lack of knowledge is a need, satisfied by education.
Hunger is a need, satisfied by food.
Solving the world hunger problem will not, indeed, be easily solved.
Humans are social animals; and you want to eliminate the suffering associated with hunger & starvation; but to do this you have to change the society itself.mindless_idiot wrote:
The complex you want to create is the right to a society/culture - and that would be a flourishing one. Reduction of the complex to the simple can potentially create problems rather than solve them. I abhor the base realist idea that "a population exceeds the food supply." But, this base natural mechanism plays itself out, on a daily basis, in the world.
To create the right to prosperity (a diverse easily accessed food supply would be included in this sub-set) - you must create a self-sustaining or interdependent complex; a society capable of meeting the demands of a population; not the demands of an individual. Or the demands of a singular event (a drought, etc).
Last edited by topal63 (2007-05-16 12:21:58)
QFTBertster7 wrote:
Yes there is. Full English breakfast with tea and orange juice.KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
Yeah, I agree. Still, no better hangover cure than a McMuffin.
lol!apollo_fi wrote:
The lack of knowledge is a need, satisfied by education.
Hunger is a need, satisfied by food.
Hey, hey...Bertster7 wrote:
lol!apollo_fi wrote:
The lack of knowledge is a need, satisfied by education.
Hunger is a need, satisfied by food.
The lack of knowledge is a need?
Hunger is a need?
Nourishment is the need. Hunger is the condition that arises from not meeting that need in a timely fashion.apollo_fi wrote:
Hey, hey...Bertster7 wrote:
lol!apollo_fi wrote:
The lack of knowledge is a need, satisfied by education.
Hunger is a need, satisfied by food.
The lack of knowledge is a need?
Hunger is a need?
Give a non-native a break. How come hunger is not a need? As in 'I'm hungry, I need food'? I have a need for food, yes, but is 'Food' really the need?
Holy mistaken semantics.Vilham wrote:
Food is a need. Hunger is a condition of a lack of food.
I think what you're really trying to say is this (am I wrong)?apollo_fi wrote:
Holy mistaken semantics.Vilham wrote:
Food is a need. Hunger is a condition of a lack of food.
Thank you gentlemen, I have just learned... an idiom.
Last edited by topal63 (2007-05-16 12:43:53)
No... that's not quite what I am attempting to saytopal63 wrote:
I think what your really trying to say is this (am I wrong)?apollo_fi wrote:
Holy mistaken semantics.Vilham wrote:
Food is a need. Hunger is a condition of a lack of food.
Thank you gentlemen, I have just learned... an idiom.
That the quality of life you enjoy should be something freely available to others (since it seems freely available to you in your society)? This includes access to food?