Please do not hesitate to make several arguments at once. — LFranc
how can we still justify livestock farming? — LFranc
Ours wasn't that hard. After we moved to the country, my SO asked where to build the chicken coop. I said I didn't want chickens. "Why not?" "Who's going to kill them? Not me!" "Me either. But wait, that's hypocrisy, having other people do your killing." "Yes, it is." "So what's the alternative?"I've often admired vegetarianism, and have even tried to 'go vegetarian' for quite long periods, but living in a meat-based culture, and having been brought up consuming meat, it's hard to find the motivation to continue with it. — Wayfarer
I'd rather not have the meat substitute. Vegetarianism is good enough.many farming systems are now capable of developing plant-based meat alternatives — LFranc
- no livestock farming can take place without causing suffering to the animals — LFranc
That must be comforting.Often I feel we project our own capacity to suffer onto animals but I think we're far worse off in terms of our capacity to suffer. — Nils Loc
With excellent reason. As Mark Twain said: "Humans are the only animal that blushes - or needs to."Humans are probably the most angst ridden animal in the history of Earth. — Nils Loc
All of nature hunts, kills, consumes, devours; vines strangle, weeds crowd out and take over, each animals draws oxygen from the air leaving waste in its path. — Fire Ologist
I don't think any comparison to nature is valid. We took ourselves out of nature a long time ago, and have done everything our clever imagination could invent to protect ourselves from nature. The only thing nature gives animals that we refuse them is liberty - one of the things we most prize for ourselves.Just so, and well farmed animals will suffer less stress, be better fed, and protected from disease and parasites than their wild cousins. — unenlightened
Maybe he doesn't need to justify it. Not everyone has the same sensibilities. — Vera Mont
agribusiness wouldn't have choices, both is what he cultivates and how he goes about it. — Vera Mont
Only I didn't ask that question, and I don't think the OP was asking how the farmer justifies his living, but how the consumer justifies his food choices. That's just a guess, of course.That seems implied when you gave the question: "How can we still justify... " — Apustimelogist
Most agribusiness is not owned by 'a farmer'. Many farms are held by families, so the decisions are made by several senior members. The living they provide can be precarious, but many of these farmers have changed their methods according to the consumers' changing preferences and to reduce their dependence on suppliers. However, the corporate investors don't need to be responsive to public sentiment or local market conditions.I guess it depends on economics. I'm sure if more ethical choices were economically more lucrative, farmers would jump on it. I can't speak for whether such possible changes present significant economic risk to farmers that threaten thwie livelihoods. Possibly for some in some places. — Apustimelogist
Only I didn't ask that question — Vera Mont
and I don't think the OP was asking how the farmer justifies his living, but how the consumer justifies his food choices. That's just a guess, of course. — Vera Mont
There is always a choice. — Vera Mont
So you think that sustaining their living is not a justification because the risks from making changes are not risky enough? — Apustimelogist
We are in overshoot. — unenlightened
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