Dizchu said:
Lightknight said:
If you believe that what you're doing is right/good, does this not mean that you believe people who aren't doing what you're doing are doing wrong? Do you really disassociate your own moral values from how more people should behave?
It's not quite as simple as that. I believe what I'm doing is more in line with my own values and as a result makes me a more honest person. While I think a reduction in meat consumption and fossil fuel consumption would do the planet (and humanity) a lot of good, the species relies so heavily on these industries that it'd be unreasonable to fault every individual.
So if a person's personal values were "screw the environment" you would view them as at least internally consistent if they did things that harmed the environment and not evil or bad? I mean, I've heard of people taking "relative truth" to the next level but I'm having a hard time accepting this to be the case inside of a person's innermost thoughts. I believe some things are inherently wrong. Driving up to a farm and shooting cows in the face and then just driving off to leave their carcasses to rot for no reason other than the thrill of it: inherently wrong with no redeeming factor. Even the "joy of the thrill" is tainted.
But intensive farming on the scale we have today is no comparison for hunting for survival.
Doesn't really matter, we are omnivores and consumption of meat is biologically evolved in us. Whether we get our food from a facility that kills animals quickly and efficiency or through trial and error in the wild with weaponry it is our nature as the animals we are to pursue meat. We are no more guilty than a lion who picks off the weakest of a herd. You seem to acknowledge that fact below though. So... *high five*
The industrial complex allows us to reduce the impact on the environment per calorie produced.
It's not sustainable for the environment,
Not really true, especially regarding pork and poultry, elaborating below.
it's not comparable to other predator-prey interactions because it's a highly industrialised process.
That's because it's livestock, not prey. Livestock used to be synonymous with wealth and everyone who was anyone owned at least a small herd in addition to whatever other businesses they were engaged in.
If I were to completely dismiss the animal welfare aspect, I'd still be left with the environmental aspect. It takes a ridiculous amount of water, energy, transportation and land to keep up with current demands.
You do realize that this is an identical argument to be made against farmland, right? While beef certainly has a higher carbon footprint per calorie than any individual veggie, just tomatoes and broccoli by themselves combine to take up a higher footprint than beef. But you don't hear vegetarians call for an end to tomatoes and broccoli, do you? Despite pork and poultry both having a lower environmental impact than either tomatoes or broccoli. Cheese, yogurt, and eggs are even lower than potatoes per calorie. I really hope your diet is ultra bean/legume heavy.
People have been erroneously using kilograms to measure the emissions and have been padding the studies for years. But if you drop a kilogram of meat from your diet you don't replace it with a kilogram of broccoli. You'd have to replace it with 6.7 kilograms to maintain the caloric intake.
https://img.washingtonpost.com/rw/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2014/03/11/Food/Images/emissionsCHART_NUupdate.jpg?uuid=g3H2xqlGEeOKe8HGhOJnHw
So I'm sorry, the numbers don't add up to any kind of case against most meat. Beef is pretty high, but it's not out of the ballpark to the point where you can really claim it shouldn't exist for environmental reasons. It also fails to account for some animals that do active harm to the planet. Deer, Canadian geese and wild pigs do active damage where they are (especially when overpopulated for the first two), eat one of those and you actually have a net-positive on the environment.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/food/vegetarian-or-omnivore-the-environmental-implications-of-diet/2014/03/10/648fdbe8-a495-11e3-a5fa-55f0c77bf39c_story.html
I mean, the single greatest thing you or anyone can do for the environment is not have any children. That's like, miles above any efforts what your diet consists of can do regarding your carbon footprint. To be internally consistent most vegetarians who are such on the lines of environmentalism should not reproduce.
Exactly, and that's what my personal issue with the industry is. Not how animals die, but how they live. Well that, and the unsustainability of the industry at its current state of growth.
Want to hear something funny? The industrial complex actually reduces the carbon footprint per calorie for meat. Confined spaces mean less consumption, hormones mean faster growth which means less time to emit methane, to even requiring less feed (aka fewer acres to grow their food). So which do you place at a higher premium, carbon footprint or quality of life for livestock?
Even agriculture sees that while organic farms produce less CO2 per acre they can have such a lower yield that the carbon footprint is actually significantly higher for them than for the big business down the road. So Vegans and Vegetarians frequently end up with veggies that might be a lot higher than normal. Kind of depressing.
Personally that ship has sailed, though I do endorse that method of farming compared to the alternative. If I still ate meat and it came from sources like that, sure I'd feel a lot less cognitive dissonance. I don't think humans necessarily should have to abandon meat, we did evolve to be omnivorous after all. If there were a way to supply the demand in an environmentally sustainable way, and as ethically as is realistically possible then yeah I wouldn't have a problem with it. I can't say the same for others that don't eat meat, but personally it's the excess of the industry, not its mere existence that I take issue with.
What about pork and poultry? Both have free range varieties and both have a lower carbon footprint per calorie than tomatoes or broccoli. Every time I consume chicken instead of eating the equivalent calories in salad I am likely being more environmentally conscious than a vegetarian is. That's a scary thought. But apparently every time I eat a chicken salad without counting calories then I'm just being a dick
