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Dukasaur wrote:pmchugh wrote:It's a cruel world. The family dog is going to die whether I eat it or not, so I might as well eat it.
It's a cruel world. The toddler is going to die whether I eat it or not, so I might as well eat it.
It's a cruel world. The monkey is going to die whether I eat it or not, so I might as well eat it.
It's a cruel world. The Jewish people are going to die whether I eat them or not, so I might as well eat them.*
Because the world is cruel, and because death is inevitable are not justifications for killing. Never mind the whole life of suffering and captivity that the chicken was bred into by your purchasing.
*note that I am not saying these statements are all equally wrong, just that the argument presented makes no sense.
I have no moral reason not to eat the family dog; only emotional ones. I love the family dog, therefore I choose not to eat it. It's not a moral imperative, but a subjective choice.
Not killing people for food is a Social Contract issue, and further than that it's an instinctive taboo. Virtually all species turn away from killing and eating their own kind, except in dire need. Just one of those instinctive taboos that Evolution has given us. If we killed each other for food we might easily hunt ourselves down to the point of being at risk of extinction. Thus we have a strong aversion to it, and yet, in times of extreme need people have eaten each other, as do other animals. This is even true of essentially herbivorous species like field mice.
If I did eat people, I would not discriminate between Jews, Christians, and Buddhists.
I have no reason not to eat monkeys, except that monkey is not generally offered at the restaurants I frequent. If I was in Thailand or Indonesia, I might eat monkey at some of the restaurants there that serve it. I would ask about the source of the monkey, and I would not eat one that was on the Endangered list, because I believe in preserving biodiversity. I would have no problem eating a monkey that was from a thriving species.
betiko wrote:Because we can! Because it s better than eating factory farmed humans.
WingCmdr Ginkapo wrote:pmchugh wrote:I think any reasonable person can see that not all human well-being trumps all animal well-being. Take a sadistic person who enjoys kicking pigs, for example.
In order for it to be any kind of reasonable moral argument you would have to describe in what meaningful ways you would suffer if you didn't eat animals, and why that is more important than the the animals suffering.
Kicking pigs has nothing to do with this discussion.
We would not benefit from a protein rich diet, that is suffering on some scale. As our well being trumps the animals, it is worthwhile.
You want me to admit that causing suffering to animals should be in some way accountable. I'm sorry but that doesnt fit with the moral position I have chosen to adopt here. You said present a case, you did not say that it had to fit with your view of the world.
All animal suffering is worthwhile if it provides benefit to humans. Kicking a pig does not provide a benefit and is therefore not worthwhile. Factory farming does so is worthwhile.
Why would i want a dairy free cookie?
fp'dpmchugh wrote:Perhaps you are more idealistic than me but I can't possibly see any system which could function without causing mass suffering while producing the amounts of meat and poultry that are demanded by our current eating habits.
Precisely. Factory farming is a necessity as I established earlier.
It is the position of the American Dietetic Association that appropriately planned vegetarian diets, including total vegetarian or vegan diets, are healthful, nutritionally adequate, and may provide health benefits in the prevention and treatment of certain diseases. Well-planned vegetarian diets are appropriate for individuals during all stages of the life cycle, including pregnancy, lactation, infancy, childhood, and adolescence, and for athletes.
WingCmdr Ginkapo wrote:pmchugh wrote:I did caveat my OP with the word "decent"![]()
Human well-being is not dependent on whether or not you eat factory farmed meat. Except in the most trivial of senses, e.g. taste. It can easily be argued that human well-being is actually diminished by animal products and they way in which we consume them.
Animal well-being most certainly is suffering though. The reality for factory farmed animals is a life in tragic conditions; lacking sunlight, grass and affection and full of physical, emotional and psychological pain.
Either we have an ambition of meat available to all and factory farm to achieve that.
Or we eradicate factory farming and make meat a luxury for the elite.
The first option represents; Human Wellbeing > Animal Wellbeing
Dukasaur wrote:Changing the anthrocentricity in the thread would not change the issue.
pmchugh wrote:Almost everyone I know does it, and no one I know has ever presented a decent moral argument that supports it.
saxitoxin wrote:Serbia is a RUDE DUDE
may not be a PRUDE, but he's gotta 'TUDE
might not be LEWD, but he's gonna get BOOED
RUDE
Serbia wrote:I don't need to feel morally justified when eating my steak, I just need it to be tasty and leave me satisfied.
mrswdk wrote:inb4 Mets
Metsfanmax wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Changing the anthrocentricity in the thread would not change the issue.
You mean anthropocentricity. You can't just drop the 'po.' Anthropo comes from the Greek for "human," so an abbreviation to "anthro" is not etymologically correct. Hence, anthropology, not anthrology.
mrswdk strikes again and again! Boom!
Metsfanmax wrote:WCG is right.
Metsfanmax wrote:You didn't "predict" my involvement, you caused it. If you hadn't posted that, I never would have posted either.
Threadception.
mrswdk wrote:All I see is two guys so desperate to snatch a victory from that Chinawoman that they've had to resort to putting their fingers in their ears and shouting 'lalala'.
Metsfanmax wrote:you didn't predict anything correctly
mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:you didn't predict anything correctly
Yes I did. I predicted that you would post in this thread
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