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04-07-2010, 05:54 AM | #311 (permalink) |
Unrepentant Ass-Mod
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Exactly.
Pathos-based arguments really don't serve to persuade me much either, rather I find they diminish the credibility of the speaker. Which is why I think a lot of vegetarians/vegans get a bad rap from time to time. Whenever my health serves to be benefited greater by the abstention of meat from my diet than with it, then I would surely consider pursuing it. Right now I'm far too content with my active lifestyle to see much (if any) benefit from cutting meat from my diet.
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04-07-2010, 09:24 AM | #312 (permalink) | ||
Nae wains, Great Danes.
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04-07-2010, 11:08 AM | #313 (permalink) | |||||||||
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Location: Where people kill 30 million pigs per year
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It sounds like your philosophy is "might makes right." Yet just because an animal does something in the wild, does that mean you follow its behavior? A lion will occasionally kill a human. This probably doesn't mean you would kill a human, too...so why base *any* of your behavior choices on what other animals do? Yes, nature is horribly brutal in many ways, and people can behave that way, also. My view is this: given how much suffering exists in the world as one animal eats another, I don't want people to add to it and make the world even worse. Even if an animal can't learn to say or express "no," a squawk or squeal of terror works for me. Some non-human animals actually can say "no," such as parrots and their close relatives. Apes can learn sign language to say "no." This doesn't prevent some people from eating them, though The Bushmeat Trade and Parrot Pie Recipe - YumYum.com). Would you eat a parrot or a gorilla? Quote:
Freebase, Tore, Lucifer_Sam, and kayleigh, thanks for sharing your rationales for eating animals. It sounds like you aren't very swayed by a desire to prevent other sentient beings from avoiding early deaths at the hands of humans, although Tore, you wrote that you would rather animals didn't suffer, and the closer you identify emotionally with an animal the less likely you would be to eat it. So, there is an emotional component to your decision-making process for eating animals. Freebase, the rest of my comments are about your answer. I went though it carefully to figure out where we agree or disagree. Golly, that was a long answer you gave! I might even call it a "Vegangelica-esque Reply" if I were to be charitable. Quote:
I also like broccoli, but I wouldn't eat broccoli if scientists learned it has a previously undiscovered neural system that gives it sentience (an experience and awareness of feelings, pain, pleasure, etc.). Quote:
People have the capacity to have empathy and sympathy for other beings (as do many other animals, I'd argue) and people have a strong ability to love...but this ability isn't consistently applied to other beings. As an example: some captured German Nazi soldiers listening to classical music would cry with deep emotion because of the beauty of it, but had no twinge of emotion at all when hunting down and shooting Jewish people. So, I agree with you that our values (such as avoiding killing others) aren't a universal aspect of nature. Our values are flexible and can be changed to some degree (probably the age of the person has an impact on this). I don't feel humans "must maintain balance" in the natural world (and how do you define "balance?"), though I don't want humans and their doings to crowd out most other species. One argument against expansive meat-eating is that it does *not* maintain "balance" in ecosystems. One-third of the land mass is used for livestock grazing, reducing the population sizes of many other species. Humans are fishing tuna and other sea species to close to population collapse. Quote:
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The situation in which we (in the developed world) exist is that eating animals is not necessary for survival, so I feel arguments based on the belief that "we eat animals for survival" are spurious. Quote:
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I understand that non-human animals have less of an ability than humans to avoid eating other animals, and I don't want carnivores like lions to die out, so I wouldn't stop them from hunting in the wild, even though I see that when a lion kills a gazelle this is good for the lion but horrible for the gazelle. I don't like how nature works but I accept it. However, I know humans *do* have a choice about what or whom they eat, and *can* be vegetarian, and *can* stop themselves from raising and killing billions of animals each year, and so that is why I dislike it that people raise animals to kill them. Yes, animals experience awful pain and misery in the jaws and paws of other animals, but humans have added to that pain by increasing the number of animals subjected to short and brutal lives lacking basic freedoms.
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Last edited by VEGANGELICA; 04-07-2010 at 11:20 AM. |
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04-07-2010, 12:14 PM | #314 (permalink) | |
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04-07-2010, 12:24 PM | #315 (permalink) | ||
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04-07-2010, 12:46 PM | #316 (permalink) |
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They're so cute I could just eat them up. Err- wait....
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Life is just blah, blah, blah You hope for blah And sometimes you find it, but mostly it's blah And waiting for blah And hoping you were right about the blahs you made And then, just when you think you've got the whole blah'd damn thing figured out And you're surrounded by the ones you blah Death shows up... anddd blah, blah, blah. |
04-07-2010, 12:59 PM | #317 (permalink) | |
Nae wains, Great Danes.
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Baby pigs melt my heart, but once they're older, they aren't so cutesy and aesthetically pleasing. I'm not saying this to cause offence, it's the same with sheep and cows. They lose the cuteness
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04-07-2010, 03:56 PM | #318 (permalink) |
one big soul
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I eat a lot of meat, but aside from meat I eat at resturants or snacks, it's all local. That's one of the good things about living in hick country.
So do babies, but we don't eat children once they grow to be 6 or 7 now do we?
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04-07-2010, 05:58 PM | #319 (permalink) | |
Nae wains, Great Danes.
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Aww people are cutesy all their life's .
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04-07-2010, 06:04 PM | #320 (permalink) |
The Sexual Intellectual
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Sorry but this was the first thing that came into my mind....
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