Originally Posted by lillypad
You make a lot of good points in your statement. However I do have to disagree with a few of them. First, the vegetarian diet is not
necessarily lower in calories. It depends on what kind of vegetables you are consuming. If you are eating primarily leaves and greens then yes you are correct. However if you are consuming beans, potatoes, and corn, it can be just as high as the average American's diet and it is still considered to be vegetarian. Oils from plant sources can also raise your total in a hurry.
Next, to be on a low-carb diet you don't have to be consuming a wheelbarrow load of animal fat on a daily basis. Neither do you have to focus your diet on red meat or any other type of large production farm-raised animals. Have you ever heard of fish? I mean the ocean-caught type, not the trout raised in fish farms. I don't believe that fishermen are out there shoveling fish food and fish growth hormone into the ocean to increase the rate of tuna production. Sure you have to worry about consuming a little mercury, but look at all of the herbicides and insecticides that are added to vegetables in order to produce more and more of them. I'm still worried about what long-term effects that these may have on my body. You just have to "pick your poison". If you are raising your own vegetables, you can control this but very few people do anymore. You can also use olive oil, peanut oil, and canola oil as your primary fat sources, it doesn't have to be beef tallow and lard. Just a few points for you to consider.

Whoa, Check out the state of our worlds fisheries before thinking that eating fish is the answer to waist problems and will have no bearing on nature..Here on the east coast.. flounder, fluke,whiting,bergalls, sea bass,cod, pollock,sheepshead,porgy, weakfish are all inshore fish that are either heavy regulated or are beyond help, recreational striped bass fishermen are allowed 2 fish per day, and offshore species such as swordfish and tuna are also in dire trouble..
I enjoy eating fish now and then, but hate to see it hyped as a diet staple when eating it is not part of ones natural diet, there just aint enough to go around.