Why are some Animals worthy of love and affection, while others are sent to slaughterhouses for our consumption? — chatterbears
2. Do you think that all Animals should have equal moral value, in the way we treat them and care for them? — chatterbears
Does every Animal deserve the basic right to life and freedoms that we desire for ourselves? (Such as freedom from slavery, fear, etc. — chatterbears
Do you think Animal cruelty is wrong? — chatterbears
Do you think we need to eat animals to survive? — chatterbears
The reason why people send animals to slaughterhouses for their consumption is because it is beneficial to their survival and happiness. — VagabondSpectre
Not possible. By building dwellings we displace and destroy multitudes of critters and creatures. Our roads disrupt, our fires and excrement pollutes; we cause harm and it's just a matter of choosing who or what will pay the price for our existence. — VagabondSpectre
The more sentient (and perhaps by extension, intelligent) a thing is, the more I tend to extend moral consideration toward that thing. — VagabondSpectre
The farm animals we raise would need to be euthanized because we cannot afford to raise and care for them if they do not contribute to our own survival needs. — VagabondSpectre
No animal, human or otherwise, has the right to be free from fear. — VagabondSpectre
Yep. The world cannot go vegan (at least not yet). In other words, some people must eat meat to survive. — VagabondSpectre
Agreed. So if we acknowledge that a pig, cow and chicken has similar sentience to us and dogs, why do we slaughter them by the billions every year? — chatterbears
Or we could stop breeding them into existence and let them die off naturally, since the farm animals we bred do not even exist in the wild. — chatterbears
You are taking "right" in a too literal sense, as if there's a contract or document that comes with it. I can rephrase this simply to mean, does every sentient being deserve to live in a state of comfort, rather than a state of fear? Of course this isn't possible for every sentient being, because even some humans are born into slavery in some countries. But generally speaking, if we had the choice, as Humans, to strike fear or provide comfort, should we not provide comfort instead? — chatterbears
What are you basing this on? The amount of people that need to rely on meat to survive, is incredibly trivial. But also, these questions are directed at you as well, but you seemed to have answered for the group, instead of for yourself. Do you, Vagabond, need to eat meat to survive? — chatterbears
Niether cows, nor chickens nor dogs are similar to us in term of sentience. Other great apes, dolphins, elephants, and perhaps many others have high degrees of sentience and intelligence, but they are still not on the level of homo-sapiens. — VagabondSpectre
We can't even afford to let them die off naturally as if we're to go vegan we need all available resources to ensure the success of that endeavor. (setting them loose would be much more cruel than euthanasia) — VagabondSpectre
Striking fear into farm animals is counter-productive though, and is not the same moral question as whether or not we're ethically justified to slaughter them. — VagabondSpectre
I suspect that I need to eat meat to have optimum health (and not because I like the taste). — VagabondSpectre
The fact is that I already eat a lot, and if I stop eating meat I'm going to have to increase the volume even higher as non-meat alternatives are not as protein/fat dense. — VagabondSpectre
Likely an animal of prey is slaughtered far more violently and suffers more long when it is killed by a pack of wolves than how their domesticated relatives meet their death in the industrialized slaughter house. And the reason for us to farm animals is quite logical: there is so many of us.Humans being meat eaters isn't what is wrong. It is that we actively impose on Nature the nightmare that is industrialized mass breeding and slaughter. — Akanthinos
What is so wrong in accepting that we as humans are omnivores? — ssu
What is wrong in the idea that the human species, however advanced it has become and superior to other species, is still a species of and thus eats other fauna? — ssu
What is wrong in the fact that life exists because one type of animals eat others and not only fauna eating flora? — ssu
Why the idea that veganism is found to be so morally superior? — ssu
Likely an animal of prey is slaughtered far more violently and suffers more long when it is killed by a pack of wolves than how their domesticated relatives meet their death in the industrialized slaughter house. — ssu
And the reason for us to farm animals is quite logical: there is so many of us. — ssu
The simple fact is, cows, chickens and pigs have sentience. Of course they do not have the same intelligence level as us, but that is irrelevant to whether or not they do in fact have sentience. They can experience pain and pleasure, which is all you need when deciding whether or not an animal deserves moral consideration. Cows, chickens and pigs are deserving of moral consideration, at the most basic level. Which is, do they deserve to live and not be exploited? I think the clear answer here is yes. — chatterbears
Farmers would be able to keep their same job and land, but replacing it with vegetables/fruits/grains/etc — chatterbears
Are you ethically justified in slaughtering farm animals? — chatterbears
Those are just a few studies (there are many more out there), that showcase a plant-based diet having more benefits to your health. — chatterbears
And would they eat more meat, if they would be better hunters? It's absolutely logical for an omnivore to eat meat than things like grass.We no longer need to eat animals to survive. And we really never did, as even our closest ancestors (gorillas, chimpanzees, etc) are 95% vegetarians (plants and fruits). Chimpanzees rely heavily on fruits and plants, but sometimes eat insects and smaller mammals. — chatterbears
OK, I'll answer. But why assume I'll come to your conclusion?Read the last part of my initial post, and you'll come to the same conclusion. Or I will paste it here again: — chatterbears
Of course not! If I live in a city, it's still quite good to know basic survival skills like which berries or mushrooms you can pick and eat from the forest. I really don't need the skills for survival as I can buy everything from the supermarket (and be rather confident that nothing there is poisonous to me). I really like to go with my children to the forest, pick up mushrooms and make great food.- Do you think actions become unnecessary when they are not required for our survival? — chatterbears
And this brings us to the philosophically important question: why do you think that we basically aren't part of nature?Not to mention, an animal of prey dies in the wild, naturally. — chatterbears
I still think that animal cruelty is a different question than veganism. Or to think that being against animal cruelty means that you have to be a vegan is simply illogical.As for care, the plant I worked at had received a lot of negative feedback concerning cruelty, so the government had actually forced the company to accept having an permanent inspection officer on location to prevent abuse. Even that didnt stop much, in my opinion. — Akanthinos
It's absolutely logical for an omnivore to eat meat than things like grass. — ssu
Of course not! If I live in a city, it's still quite good to know basic survival skills like which berries or mushrooms you can pick and eat from the forest. I really don't need the skills for survival as I can buy everything from the supermarket (and be rather confident that nothing there is poisonous to me). I really like to go with my children to the forest, pick up mushrooms and make great food. — ssu
And this brings us to the philosophically important question: why do you think that we basically aren't part of nature?
Because it seems like obviously what we do is unnatural (kill animals) for you, but what other animals do (kill other animals) is natural. — ssu
As I've pointed out to you seemingly hundreds of times, we cannot afford to let chickens and cows live unless we exploit them; for them it's either live and be exploited or never live at all. Is it better to live and be exploited than to never live at all? — VagabondSpectre
Not in the least. The kind of forage that many free-range cattle live off is ground that no crops can be grown upon. Field corn (which is what the U.S uses to feed its numerous amount of grain fed cows and chickens) is largely grown on land that is not high enough quality to grow vegan foods like sweet corn or other veg/fruit. — VagabondSpectre
Many farmers continue to raise livestock because it makes the most economic sense for them to do so, and some farms and ranches, by their very nature, can never be profitable without livestock. — VagabondSpectre
We can gradually shift away from livestock production, but we cannot increase our fruit and veg production at arbitrarily fast rates (in order to grow and store enough of our own produce to be nutritionally self-sufficient, we would need massive innovations in indoor growing and refrigerated infrastructure out the wazoo). — VagabondSpectre
Aside from being much more expensive, another problem with eliminating animal husbandry entirely is that planning vegan diets (especially a nutritionally adequate national supply) is more difficult than planning diets with some meat (because you need to consume a greater volume of vegan foods to gain the same levels of nutrition, meaning you need to plan what you eat more carefully to have well rounded nutrition). — VagabondSpectre
Animal free agriculture is actually much less efficient than some animal husbandry for a lot of farms, while being logistically more complex in almost every way. — VagabondSpectre
If super-healthy and tasty vegan diets weren't so damn expensive, more people would be vegan; — VagabondSpectre
For starters, where are you going to get all the fertilizer once we no longer breed cows? — VagabondSpectre
If it's gradual and by consumer demand (assuming that's your view) you should be prepared for food to become much more expensive than it is right now, for the reasons I've mentioned, and for many more reasons which we'll never get into. — VagabondSpectre
If the farm animal was bred and raised for slaughter, and if that's the only way it ever could have existed in the first place, then yes. — VagabondSpectre
On average vegans might be more healthy (especially as North America is over-weight on the whole) but I don't see evidence that vegan diets would benefit me. (I'm worried about losing weight, which is what I fear a vegan diet would cause). — VagabondSpectre
Seems you don't have any idea what is the philosophical question about humans being part of nature. OK, I'll try to explain my point better.When did I ever say we are not part of nature? What even gave you that impression. Humans are animals, just as dogs, sheep, cows and chickens are animals. We are all a part of nature. But breeding animals into existence, while torturing and slaughtering them on a mass scale, is not natural. Factory farms are not part of 'nature'. — chatterbears
Isn't ALL life imbued with the same value, all things which can self-replicate? Why do we kill and eat plants. Shame on us. — gloaming
No. I spent a few months working there, and then at some point I counted the number of hogs I had seen going in. 2 millions. My dad had told me, when he sent me working there, to work hard at it, but to always be looking for a reason to quit and get myself a better job. That I had a (shared) killcount of anything in the millions was a good enough reason for me. — Akanthinos
Now I assume that this kind of alteration of the environment or 'farming' by a species you deem 'natural', but when it comes to our species, suddenly everything we do becomes so 'unnatural' — ssu
The judgement is solely based on your own views on morality, what is deemed 'good' and what is 'bad' and that is totally understandable to me. Yet you try justify it by reason and above all, by science. As that if we can survive on a vegan diet, then it is by 'reason' and 'science' that we should be vegans. — ssu
Do you think that domesticated animals cannot have a good life? — ssu
Or that they don't deserve a life? — ssu
You propose as your 'humane' final solution be to gradually stop breeding the domesticated animals. Yet what you are promoting is still the extinction of what you apparently think as 'unnatural' animals as they have been produced 'unnaturally'. — ssu
Somehow for you the solution cannot be that cruelty (that Akanthintos gives examples of) would be reduced by simply improving living standards of domesticated animals. No. Your 'benevolent' answer is the mass extinction of this kind of life. Because it's not 'natural', even if you admit that we are one natural species just like others in the World altering our environment to fit our desires. — ssu
This is a false dichotomy. When black people were enslaved, were the only two options these:
1. Live and be exploited
2. Never live at all
Absolutely not. We can allow these animals to live and die naturally, but also STOP the breeding. — chatterbears
47% of soy and 60% of corn produced in the US being is being consumed by livestock. Feed this to humans instead of livestock, and the amount can drastically decrease (or kept the same and be fed to millions of people who starve). — chatterbears
Which is why the public would demand plant-based products, in which I can almost guarantee you that these farmers (and the government) would figure out how to become profitable with plant-based products. They continue to profit from livestock, because there is a demand for it. And the government provides substantial subsidies for it. — chatterbears
Why is this a problem? Figuring out the technicalities is the least of our problems. Actually putting in the effort to make the change is our worst problem. — chatterbears
Less efficient how? But even if that were the case, I am sure we could figure it out just fine. For how technologically advanced we are, you really don't think we could figure out how to change animal farms into plant farms efficiently? — chatterbears
So people's taste pleasure of 5 minutes is worth more than the life of an innocent animal? Even if the food isn't as tasty right now, would you not rather eat a less tasty food, than contribute to animal torture and slaughter? — chatterbears
There are plant-based fertilizers already. But again, I am sure we could figure this out. You're naming a bunch of technicalities that won't matter in the long run. We, as humans, are smart enough to figure out things. It's just a matter of how bad we want it, and how selfish we are willing to be. — chatterbears
And white people thought the same thing about black people. People used God/Bible to condone slavery, and said things like "Black people were bred and raised to become slaves." - Basing your moral decisions on "if that's the only way it ever could have existed", is a very poor way to come to a conclusion. — chatterbears
I gave you plenty of sources and real life examples (nuts / soy) that you can start with. If you actually did the research yourself, the evidence is clear. If you want to deny the evidence and demonstrable studies, that's up to you. But you might as well deny most of scientific peer reviewed study at that point. — chatterbears
Black people are people, they aren't farm animals. If left alone, black people can take care of themselves and survive. If left alone, farm animals cannot survive (they'll starve during the first winter or be killed by predators). There are so many farm animals that if we decided to keep feeding and caring for them without harvesting their meat then every meat farmer would go into debt. — VagabondSpectre
If there was no demand for meat then everything else would suddenly become more expensive while meat farmers go out of business. — VagabondSpectre
The fact is that 90% of the land used to grow field corn isn't suitable for human quality produce (unless high fructose corn syrup is healthy). It's simply not more efficient to stop farming animals. — VagabondSpectre
It's a problem because we don't have the technology science or infrastructure to make the switch yet. — VagabondSpectre
Not unless you know some kind of alchemy that can magically fertilize fields and turn feed corn into sweet corn. — VagabondSpectre
Even if we burned off all our taste buds it's still more expensive. — VagabondSpectre
Eventually we may figure out how to adequately nourish the entire planet without the use of animals, but we havn't yet figured that out. — VagabondSpectre
Humans are much more sentient than farm animals, which is my first objection to this comparison. Secondly, if I was a slave who could only ever have existed if I am eventually slaughtered, I would still rather have existed than never have existed at all. — VagabondSpectre
You don't know me, the research I've done, or the diets I've tried. Copy/pasting the studies you find is the laziest kind of research possible (it's not even a citation, you might as well just start dropping book titles), and you have given me utterly zero reasons to take your assertions with any grains of authority.
You're presumptive in the extreme about the science of nutrition, and ignorant in the extreme about the realities of agriculture. — VagabondSpectre
Why are people deserving of living a life without exploitation, but animals are not? Also, of course the farm animals that we genetically modified into existence by altering their DNA, could not survive in the wild. Because we made them to be that way. Their specific purpose is for our consumption, not sustaining a long life. — chatterbears
Meat would get replaced by lab-grown meats, or soy based 'meats'. Farmers wouldn't go out of business. Their business would just evolve into something else. — chatterbears
Based on what? As I said previously, the problem is our lack of effort to initiate. — chatterbears
Which I am sure they can do. But also, it doesn't necessarily have to be corn that we grow. It can be something else, that isn't based on torturing and slaughtering sentient beings. — chatterbears
So is the price of an item more important than the life of an animal? It's like saying. Abolishing slavery will cost too much, because we get cheap/free labor when owning slaves. Nobody would say this, because a small price increase is worth the money if it results in abolishing slavery. Same with animals. I would pay more to end the suffering of these animals, and that shouldn't even be a question. — chatterbears
Do you think that we might have already figured this out, if humans actually took this seriously and made it our priority? Imagine a world of all minds thinking together and trying to figure out a solution to this problem. We probably would have had this figured out decades ago already. — chatterbears
And a severely mentally handicapped person has about the same sentience as a cow. Does that mean we should group up all the mentally ill people and exploit them? Also, would you rather live as a factory farmed animal, where you're mutilated at birth, while being kept in a small confined area your entire existence, until you were eventually sent off to get your throat slit? Or would you rather not live at all. To say you would rather be a factory farmed animal, than to not live at all, is a bit dishonest. No logical and caring person would ever say this. — chatterbears
I'm also curious how one should provide information to another person, regarding scientific studies. I'd love for you to provide me with some research that isn't lazy. Also, one of the studies I linked, did have a citation. — chatterbears
It's not about who deserves what, it's about what is thermodynamically viable and necessary to sustain our existence, and the existence of farmed animals. Life exploits life, and as I have tried to explain, we're not yet fully emancipated from nature. In other words, unless we keep eating meat in the immediate and short term, some people will be malnourished and die. — VagabondSpectre
Can you imagine the initial cost of switching from a cattle farm to a synthetic meat farm? — VagabondSpectre
But we are trying, and you seem to ignore that entirely. Why do you think there are so many vegans? Why do you think they're inventing lab grown meat? — VagabondSpectre
At the end of the day we would need to recoup these lost calories and nutrients elsewhere which may very well cost us more money despite the existence of subsidies for meat and dairy farmers. — VagabondSpectre
If to live in balance and harmony with nature we actually needed to depopulate the planet to around half a billion, would we be obligated to do so to avoid causing the suffering of other animals? — VagabondSpectre
We just have bigger problems, and it's not been long since we have become enlightened enough (by and large) to actually extend moral consideration to animals where possible. — VagabondSpectre
How expensive is it for us to care for the severely mentally handicapped? — VagabondSpectre
If it is true that farming some meat is economical, is exploiting an animal justified if it is required to care for the severely mentally handicapped?
I'm not in favor of setting them loose in the wild, that's for sure; I would rather farm animals. — VagabondSpectre
It's your evidence and you need to explain the relevant bits yourself in the context of our discussion. — VagabondSpectre
If you would like me to reintroduce the sources and arguments I've expressed in the other thread, I will happily do so. — VagabondSpectre
We're heading toward more ethical and animal free agriculture, but it will take time. Are you saying we're unethical because we should be there already? (should we fall on our pitch-forks?) Are you saying we're unethical because we're not presently heading there fast enough? How quickly do we need to stop eating animals for you to cease your ethical rebukes? — VagabondSpectre
. And as I said before, all the crops being grown to feed farm animals, could be used to feed the people who are currently malnourished — chatterbears
Granted, America consumes too much beef, I'm not denying that. The fact that they have to mass farm cattle feed to sustain their ultra-massive cattle farms is a waste of water at the extreme end. But it would be a waste of water not to graze animals on pastureland. The delusion that this 56 million acres suddenly start producing veg is silly to anyone who understands how farms work.
Here's an article that touches on some of the facts: http://www.cast-science.org/download.cfm?PublicationID=278268&File=1e30d1bf7a7156ce24b3154cc313b587d97bTR
a few quotes from the abstract:
There's a reason animal husbandry is a part of our agricultural traditions, and it's not just because we like the taste of meat. Free range chickens lead happy lives eating insects and such; they give us eggs, meat, and nitrogen rich fertilizer ingredient. Free range cows lead happy lives chewing grass, and they give us quite a bit of milk and meat along with more fertilizer ingredient. Pigs basically turn waste into meat, and while I personally would not farm pigs to eat them, on certain kinds of farms they can be useful (Permaculture).
Having too many animals just for extra meat is inefficient. Having no animals is also quite inefficient though, and I don't think we can afford it.
None of the discussions or studies linked in this thread address the net economic and nutritional costs of western societies such as America removing animals from agriculture overall. Studies which do examine comprehensively the ramifications of eliminating animals from agriculture find that there would not be sufficient availability of variety to provide adequate nutrition for the entire population. As I've alluded to before, there wouldn't be enough well-planned diets on the shelves; not enough kale.
Here's a study that examines the ramifications of removing animals from agriculture entirely with interest in greenhouse gas emissions and the nutritional requirements and impacts of and on populations
http://www.pnas.org/content/114/48/E10301
It considers what sorts of foods can be grown on the land currently used for animals and projects what our basic diets would look like in a plants only system compared to one which includes animals. It concludes that a plants-only agricultural system would increase deficiencies in certain nutriments while over-providing in calories and bio-mass.Nobody has presented me with any kind of economic or nutritional feasibility study such as this yet. You do claim to need scientific evidence for belief right?
Everybody talks about how great and superior the human race is, yet we are the least compassionate and most destructive — chatterbears
Humans being meat eaters isn't what is wrong. It is that we actively impose on Nature the nightmare that is industrialized mass breeding and slaughter. — Akanthinos
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.