This is one of the more absurd statements I've heard in a long time.
Being willing to harm one of something does not mean an inability to feel empathy for another of a similar thing.
Claiming this is a bit like saying...
- You can't love humans if you've been in a fistfight;
- You can't like cars if you've crashed one;
- You can't love women if you've had arguments with one;
All patently ridiculous statements, not even really worth arguing about.
Now, to answer some of the posts that are going down here... For the sake of argument
Just as a side-note, to qualify my statements... I have nothing against vegetarians. You see, I have heard two arguments for not ever eating meat that I found to be a really good:
1. "I honestly don't enjoy it.";
2. "I have never eaten it in my life, and thus lack the intestinal flora to process it without harm";
Most other ones fall flat if you put them through too much logic.
Being willing to harm one of something does not mean an inability to feel empathy for another of a similar thing.
Claiming this is a bit like saying...
- You can't love humans if you've been in a fistfight;
- You can't like cars if you've crashed one;
- You can't love women if you've had arguments with one;
All patently ridiculous statements, not even really worth arguing about.
Now, to answer some of the posts that are going down here... For the sake of argument
Then you better start eating some meat, buddy. You know those hundreds of millions of animals currently being raised for meat? If the market for that collapses, something is going to be done about them. Tip: It won't be shipping them to petting zoos.manic_depressive13 said:B) Yes, I think the lives of animals are more important than a mild inconvenience.Starbird said:You misunderstand me.
B) It's morally wrong to cause death/harm to animals to spare humans discomfort/inconvinience (in this case eating meat versus less tasty/satisfying vegetable alternatives).
Just to point out: Not everyone lives in countries where those practices are common. In fact, most people live in countries where those practices don't exist. I get where you're coming from, but in the big lens' view of the thing, the US cattle industry is really this bizarre anomaly, and nothing else.Gavmando said:I believe that everyone should see how farm animals are raised, slaughtered and prepared for consumption. Not to make them vegos, but to make people more aware of what they're putting in their bodies. Let people see what grain and maize does to a cow and the impact it has on the environment compared to a grass fed cow. Let them see what is fed to chickens in battery farms and the conditions they endure. And people should be a horrified as I was when I saw a news article recently about a feed shortage in the US for livestock, so they've started buying things like gummi bears to feed their animals. People are going to be buying and eating unhealthy meat. Do they really think that's a good idea in the worlds fattest country?
Thus if someone genetically engineered some species of livestock animal to be born braindead and unresponsive, would you be cool eating them, then? What I mean is: Is your issue with meat consumption one of moral problem with causing pain or distress to an entity capable of feeling such a thing, or is it merely Phylum-ism? (i.e.: An unwillingness to consume another entity of the same Phylum as you are - as that seems to be the point at which you draw the line).manic_depressive13 said:This second part is obviously a response to someone who will never get a notification since you didn't quote them properly. I may as well answer this too. I don't eat fish because I consider them to be animals. However, their ability to feel pain compared to birds and mammals is much smaller. Studies would suggest they are not "conscious" in the way birds and mammals are, and are significantly less intelligent. It could be argued that they do not experience fear or distress in any meaningful way since they simply lack the awareness. Behaviour which seems to be a fear response on the surface could well be automated, or simply a nervous response to noxious stimuli. Most vegetarians would argue that there is enough evidence that they feel pain to avoid eating them, and we simply don't fully understand brains and nervous systems which have evolved differently to our own. After all, it was only recently that we were forced to acknowledge that some cephalopods are aware and exhibit intelligence and an ability to learn on par with some mammals. This means that they probably feel distress in a similar way. However, I would argue that being a pescetarian is at least a step in the right direction, even though I don't whole heartedly support it.
Just as a side-note, to qualify my statements... I have nothing against vegetarians. You see, I have heard two arguments for not ever eating meat that I found to be a really good:
1. "I honestly don't enjoy it.";
2. "I have never eaten it in my life, and thus lack the intestinal flora to process it without harm";
Most other ones fall flat if you put them through too much logic.