Hello, I'm collecting data based on factory farming for a class. If you're interested in helping please do this survey
https://surveyplanet.com/58e6e9cce2e19b2b834502db
thanks
>>2350947
your question about treating animals "right" is leading.
your question about quality vs quantity is difficult to understand.
>>2350951
it's not hard to understand you're just a dumbfuck
>>2350947
Ok OP please explain
bitch I don't go to the store with a $20 bill burning a hole in my pocket that I want to spend on nothing but meat
>>2350987
Was gonna ask the same thing, please OP
>>2350987
OP
This question is worded very dumbly wumbly
>>2350951
>>2350987
>>2350993
>>2350996
>>2351007
okay i guess I'm a dumbfuck and I edited the question. What it's supposed to ask is if in the event that you go to a store for some meat with 20 dollars, are you more likely to buy more low quality with that 20, or less (but high quality) meat with that money.
>>2351056
There isn't much room for nuance, and quality isn't defined (is it gustatory, nutritional, or ethical, etc). I'm certainly not going to blow my weekly meat budget on wagyu, but neither am I interested in spending it on the biggest tube of pink slime they sell.
But the bit about having a weekly meat budget is kind of a lie, I buy grocery store poultry, sea food, and butcher shop fresh steak occasionally, but the majority of my meat is bought by the half of beef and whole hog, or is shot as wild game, because I own a chest freezer and am not a retard.
Also be aware that factory farming, especially of poultry, is really the most efficient way to meet demand for meat, and that this efficiency makes it the best method for the environment. If we changed from confinement raised 6 week production crosses to 12 week production crosses that would do better with more space and less medicated feed would double the number of chickens you have to keep alive at any specific point in the production cycle, and triple the amount of feed your birds are consuming, both factors that would greatly increase the ecological impact of your poultry operation.
>>2351077
this isn't exactly a survey about what kinds of meat people buy, it's mostly directed toward what people know/think about factory farming. If a question doesn't really apply to you or you don't have a definite answer it is alright, just skip the question. Either way, thanks for taking the survey, I'm just looking for general results to this.