Like Granjura and Flickety, we eat small quantities of high-quality local meat, organic wherever possible. We are surrounded by tiny dairy farms, where farmers grow all the feed for their cattle. The pastureland is incredibly rich and the milk is collected and processed locally.
We have fish twice a week (being careful not to eat fish that are under threat) and a couple of meals without meat or fish. Most importantly, I think, we grow most of our own veg and a lot of our own fruit.
I would like to see campaigns to encourage more people to grow their own. My memory is that every small suburban garden used to have a veggie patch and allotments were very popular. I just don't see that so much now in the UK. When I worked in an inner city local authority we had a project to get schools and communities using the local allotments, which were lying empty and in danger of being taken for development. The skills were still there with grandparents, but disappearing fast.
I don't have any problem at all with anyone being vegetarian, but I do object to being lectured about meat-eating (not accusing anyone on here of that) when we work very hard to eat locally grown food. Surely encouraging people to grow some of their own food (however limited the possibilities) is more useful than a month without meat.