Is it ethical to purchase factory farmed animal products and fund this? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Is it ethical to purchase factory farmed animal products and fund this? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Is purchasing factoryfarmedKILLED animal products ethical — Down The Rabbit Hole
It is not ethical for the workers to add more suffering to the animals than necessary. But that should be managed by the business. Incidents of particular employees acting unethically does not paint all people in the organization as wrong or unethical. Typically bringing these things to light puts pressure on business owners to fix their image. — Philosophim
Of course not. The workers should be allowed to take out their frustrations on society and their intimate partners. That or just let other places who don't allow such freedoms including personal belongings or electronics to document such events in the first place make all the money that will inevitably be made and perpetuate the abuse. What you don't know can't hurt you, right? What a silly thread. — Outlander
No worse than typing on a computer whose components are made in exploitive third-world factories. You might recall that a while back, Foxconn employees were committing suicide. They solved the problem by installing suicide nets on the roof.
The global supply chain is something you don't want to look too closely at. — fishfry
Factory farming is not not inherently cruel and abusive; cruelty and abuse could take place just as easily on a little farm as a very big one. Cruelty and abuse occur in human workplaces and shelters, too. — Bitter Crank
I will consume whatever is legal for me to consume without guilt. But I will advocate for changes to the economic system.
We are playing a game with each other. There are clear winners and losers. I won't compromise my position for the sake of ethical abstractions. — Garth
"Ethical" has a ring of authority, moral authority. Whereas that is a myth. Say what you think: animals should not be beaten, and one should not buy products made of tortured animals. Fine, I can support that. — god must be atheist
No. Still, I do. Guilty. — petrichor
Is killing ethical?
Is being part of the constant demand for meat that ultimately involves killing of animals ethical?
Begging the question — TheMadFool
Considering that the animals only exist because of the demand, I don't think taking their existence away to satisfy the demand is unethical. The pain and suffering that comes with it is. — Down The Rabbit Hole
It's becoming less ethical to do so ...Is it ethical to purchase factory farmed animal products and fund this? — Down The Rabbit Hole
When people are violent to humans they tend to be locked away for it. The cruelty towards animals tends to be because they literally have no voice, and the perpetrator almost always gets away with it.
The beatings and torture footage is from hidden cameras, planted by activists. As Philosophim says, this footage pressures businesses in a positive direction. — Down The Rabbit Hole
It’s estimated that there are currently 27 million shoplifters in the U.S. today, which means 1 in 11 of us steal from stores and retailers.
Pain and suffering are the harbingers of death. Their sole purpose is to warn living things when death is on the horizon. You can't separate the two - death and pain/suffering - in a way that wouldn't raise a few eyebrows here and there. That would be like a gang of thieves deciding to sabotage the the burglar alarm first and then robbing a house, fully convinced that doing the former makes their action legal (read: moral) — TheMadFool
It's becoming less ethical to do so ... — 180 Proof
What do you think would happen to those numbers if the prices for essential goods doubled? Do you think they would increase by anything less than double? — Outlander
Animals probably don’t have the same capacity to suffer as human beings do mainly because they can’t reflect on their suffering and they probably can’t be traumatized by their suffering the way that humans can be. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think that it is more rational and more good for someone to focus much more on their own hedonic welfare above the hedonic welfare of others all things being equal. — TheHedoMinimalist
Instead of spending extra money on free range meat, it is better to donate the extra money you would have spent to charities that are trying to produce inexpensive ways to make ethical meat. — TheHedoMinimalist
Surely one should stop purchasing it, thus eliminating any suffering that was resulting from you doing so. — Down The Rabbit Hole
The animals' confusion and panic can't be much better? A human can get mental strength from fighting back or contemplating escape. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I'm sure you agree that animals don't need to suffer as much as humans would in their position for their suffering to be wrong. — Down The Rabbit Hole
There is no guarantee this pittance would have any impact on innovation, where buying free range would undeniably give the animals a better quality of life. — Down The Rabbit Hole
In any event, vegan food is even cheaper, then you would have even more money to donate to the ethical meat charities, and you've caused no cruelty in the process. — Down The Rabbit Hole
None of the cruelty would occur if people were not buying the animal products.
Considering the amount of animal products consumed over one's lifetime, surely it would be better not to do so, and avoid all of the cruelty that comes as a consequence. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Many species of animal mate through a what is essentially rape -- the male chases the female down. I think of this because I just looked out my window at the pond behind my house and saw a group of mallard ducks chasing around a female. Suppose we were able to confirm through neural scans that the female really experiences this the way a human would -- terror, pain, etc. Should we then interfere with the natural process of mating of these animals for the sake of their welfare?
For instance we could begin a program of artificial insemination of female mallard ducks so that they don't have to be raped. — Garth
If, suddenly for whatever reason, more and more people stopped buying factory farmed animals and instead turned to ethically farmed animals, with a rising demand for ethically farmed animals how long do you think those ethical farms would be able to keep up the demand for their product without putting pressure on their ethical practices? That seems to me a very work intensive way to produce the same amount of product the factory farms produced. How would they manage it? — Brett
It sounds to me like you’re really against the idea of killing for food. Which I understand. The only way around that is for us to produce synthetic good or become vegans. Which would mean an end to all leather products, which is possible.
Animals are an easy source of protein for us. It’s responsible for our evolutionary success. But maybe it’s time to end it. It seems to me that farming is just an unthinking continuation of hunting for food. Do we really need that source of protein? Is there really no other way? It all looks a bit savage and primitive to me. — Brett
thank you — munmin78
Factory farming is not not inherently cruel and abusive; cruelty and abuse could take place just as easily on a little farm as a very big one. Cruelty and abuse occur in human workplaces and shelters, too. — Bitter Crank
it does appear that these animals possess sufficient instinct and awareness to find all of this very unpleasant — Mijin
I would actually experience more conflict with my family if I refused to eat factory farmed meat than if I told them I was gay. To put this in a thought experiment, suppose that it was the case that animals will suffer greatly for some strange reason if gay people don’t come out to their entire family. If you have a very religious and conservative family that also greatly supports you financially, then would it be wise to sacrifice your relationship with them by coming out to help sentient beings that you never even met. I happen to think that it would be better to keep your mouth shut. Unfortunately, keeping your mouth shut is rarely an option for those with dietary restrictions because unlike sex, eating is typically a communal activity. — TheHedoMinimalist
The first point to consider is that quality of life is often determined by internal factors rather than external ones. — TheHedoMinimalist
In addition, a single individual not buying factory farmed meat doesn’t guarantee that the production of such meat will be reduced because meat production is pretty insensitive to demand. — TheHedoMinimalist
So, free range farming is probably not much better than factory farming in reality. It’s also worth noting that free range usually just means the animals get like 1 foot of space to walk around in and they not laying on top of the other animals covered in feces. Is that a huge improvement? I don’t think that it is. — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m pretty sure it’s more expensive as it usually doesn’t fill you up as much. — TheHedoMinimalist
Plus, eating healthy is easier if you also don’t abstain from healthy meat products. Being healthy would lower your medical expenses and increase your lifespan and this would allow you to donate more money in the long run. Donating lots of money to charity also requires you to be a busy person and it’s hard to find the time to be a vegan if you are busy making money. — TheHedoMinimalist
In my view it all comes down to if your suffering will be worse than the animals'. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I remember from reading positive psychology years ago, that extra wealth only becomes meaningless to happiness after a certain point. You need enough for a comfortable life, and so would the animals. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Some meat might be healthier than others, but it all has saturated fat and cholesterol which contribute to heart disease - the biggest killer in the USA. A vegan diet is supposed to be healthier, and I don't see how it is any more time consuming. — Down The Rabbit Hole
It's surprising how conditioned we become: it didn't even occur to me that consuming animal products might cause suffering, until a few years ago. — Down The Rabbit Hole
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.