Now... I will put it like this, though I'm not in favor of treating animals like they're "above" humans, they do deserve some form of dignity and respect. Humans can stand up for themselves and speak for themselves, for the most part. Animals never have that chance, so people come to their defense much easier. I do have a tendency to flip on people who abuse animals, but that switch gets triggered for ANY lifeform that cannot defend themselves. So... yeah. I do however respect the idea of the food-chain and have no qualms about eating meat.HoneyVision said:What exactly is the defense of people who think that animals rights come before human rights?
Not even a trick question, I genuinely want to know.
Equal immediacy and visibility of need? Millions of people walk past starving homeless every day. The knowledge that there are starving people in situations of extreme privation overseas is no secret to anyone. Yet people will go out of their way to get, say, a dog, and then feed it because it's hungry.Res Plus said:Nah, you're just being willfully obtuse, the question is based on equal immediacy and visibly of need as you well know. If you are presented with two cases of hunger and the are equally easy to alleviate and you pick an animal over a human you are by very definition a sociopath.
EDIT apologies for ruined quote, phone playing up with fix as soon as I get to my pc.
But not smallpox...2xDouble said:For that very reason, because they don't understand. Rights of those incapable of understanding rights must be protected by those that do, else they become exploited, abused, or outright exterminated. It's no different than protecting children's rights, or the rights of the handicapped. Whether or not they appreciate it is irrelevant.AccursedTheory said:But why should we give 'rights' to a species of animal (All of them but us) that don't even understand the very concept of what a right may be?
I'm not saying we should all bust out the seal clubs and whale harpoons, but why should we?
To put it simply: everything that exists has the right to exist.
That includes animals raised for experimentation and food production, by the way. Simply because their existence is predetermined doesn't remove their rights to have it; our interference in their ability to exist on their own takes the responsibility of maintaining that right directly into our hands.
Is it not more time consuming to feed your pet dog? I could go to the store, buy dog food for the week,have to transport then store it, go to the effort of opening the tin, feeding the dog and then cleaning up the mess? Or I could set up direct payment from my account for the same value to say Oxfam or The Red Cross, your local foodbank or whoever.Res Plus said:"it is extraordinarily judgmental, vituperative, and hyperbolic" - ha ha, gosh, the only hyperbolic thing around here is your reply old chap.BloatedGuppy said:Ultra snip!
Anyway, no amount of bluster changes the fact that if you feed an animal over a human it's sociopathic.
Couldn't agree more. Nothing wrong with people eating animals, we're meant to be omnivores after all. Still there's huge difference between forcefed foie gras (sticking a tube down duck's throat and stuffing massive amounts of food is just torture) vs. game meat (the animal lives a totally natural life for 99.9% of the time, and the death is quicker than being killed by wolves for example). Quoting again: "THINK for a moment what it is you're contributing to by not questioning what happens to all these animals you devour."SimpleThunda said:Don't get me wrong, humans eat animals and there is nothing wrong with that.
But how we treat the animals. With what amount of hypocrisy we scoff at violence against animals and don't think twice before eating animals that've led tortured lives just to end up on our plates or in our clothes.
The lack of morality and sense we show when it comes to treatment of animals just baffles me time and time again.
I get that not everyone has the money to buy all-biological meat and all that, but just THINK for a moment what it is you're contributing to by not questioning what happens to all these animals you devour.
Not by any definition of the term outside of the fanciful one in your imagination, alas. Nevertheless, let it never be said that I do not encourage people to indulge their imaginations.Res Plus said:Anyway, no amount of bluster changes the fact that if you feed an animal over a human it's sociopathic.
Yes don't even mention PETA when talking about REAL Animal Rights groups. The could care less about helping animals.Dragonbums said:This is why I put more work into supporting the ASPCA.
Unlike PETA, these people are actual animal cops that see the horrors of animal abuse first hand.
I'm surprised it's PETA that's still the face of animal rights, when the Animal Cops series has been going on for so long.
Yes don't even mention PETA when talking about REAL Animal Rights groups. They could care less about helping animals.Dragonbums said:This is why I put more work into supporting the ASPCA.
Unlike PETA, these people are actual animal cops that see the horrors of animal abuse first hand.
I'm surprised it's PETA that's still the face of animal rights, when the Animal Cops series has been going on for so long.