| > Really? How many of the 70 billion land animals per year slaughtered for food
were rescued from the wilderness, as opposed to bred in captivity? How should I know? There's no statistics about that kind of thing. And yet it
happens all the time: that's why farm animals have bells around the neck so
that when they wander off and fall into a ravine or get stuck on a tree (goats,
for you) the farmer can find them. But aren't you moving the goalposts? First you said "farmers aren't going out
and rescuing cows from the wildernes". Now you're asking how many do. I have to ask, other than the horror youtube videos of vegan propaganda, is
there anything else you know about farming? > Btw I hear this argument all the time and it's really silly if you think about
it honestly. So you mean to say I'm either silly, or dishonest? And that's not meant to shut
me up and end conversation with a "win"? Well I won't beat about the bush as you do. I think what you propose is
demented. You're suggesting that, to avoid killing animals we should genocide
them instead. As if extinction is a better option than living a healthy and
happy life and dying at the end and in a better way than the animal would die
anyway, except it's now humans killing the animal, which seems to be the only
problem with the current status quo. Hey, I know. Maybe we should genocide all the wild animals also, so that they
stop killing each other in horrible ways and dying half-eaten by something. Oh, wait, that's actually a thing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_animal_suffering |
And you're not silly. I said the argument is silly. We all can make silly arguments from time to time when we don't really think a line of reasoning through or consider what the other person is saying. It wasn't my intention to attack your intelligence or integrity, sorry to have created this unpleasant interaction.
We obviously disagree on how rewarding the "gift of life" is. I know I wouldn't want to be a farm animal, and would prefer not to exist in the first place rather than live their life. With all due respect, I think it's you who doesn't have a clear mental model of farming at scale. You paint farming like it's your uncle's happy farm down the road. That's not how most people are getting their food. That doesn't scale to 70 billion land animals per year.
> Well I won't beat about the bush as you do. I think what you propose is demented. You're suggesting that, to avoid killing animals we should genocide them instead.
They are already being "genocided" though. That's what happens when they slow down their milk or egg production, or reach slaughter weight. I'm suggesting we stop breeding them just to be killed. This results in less killing.