Animal Sacrifice & Universal Care
My 'conversion' to a plant-based diet occurred many years ago and was ethically based. It came about by way of the simple recognition and acknowledgment that, while many animals cannot live without eating other animals, human beings can. For us, eating animals is a choice—neither our health nor our well-being depend on us eating meat or dairy; in fact, for optimum health, research strongly supports a plant-based diet. Of course, there are people in some isolated geographic areas who may need to eat meat or dairy, but it can nearly always be avoided.
When I contemplated this fact along with my life-long commitment to kindness and care for all beings (and things), I was 'done in'. I was ethically and rationally cornered: How could I possibly sacrifice an animal's life when I knew for certain it was merely a personal choice based on my tastes, customs, habitual patterns, and/or pleasure?
I had to ask myself why I would sacrifice any life, anywhere, at any time, merely for my own pleasure? I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that from now until I die, I can thrive in robust health without eating meat or dairy. There is no question of this; I've done it for many years. I realize I cannot live on earth without sacrificing life, but, ethically, I must do all I can to minimize, rather than justify, that sacrifice.
I am very grateful to Stephen David Ross. For I was prompted to this way of life in consequence of reading his “Plenishment in the Earth: An Ethic of Inclusion.” In Chapter 7,
Carnaval, he briefly discusses the Eden story and includes the following lines from Alexander Pope's “Essay on Man” (3, 4:152-164):
Man walk'd with beast, joint tenant of the shade;
The same table, and the same his bed;
Nor murder cloath'd him, and no murder fed.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Heav'n's attribute was Universal Care,
And Man's prerogative to rule, but spare.
Ah! how unlike the man of times to come!
Of half that live the butcher and the tomb;
Who, foe to Nature, hears the gen'ral groan,
Murders their species, and betrays his own.