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I grew up farming, I’ve hunted, and for the last 6 years or so I was spear fishing quite often. I’ve stopped for the last year or two. I don’t object to any and all killing of animals for meat. It seems that many people genuinely do it out of necessity, and that is arguably going to have to be okay in perpetuity. I suppose that’s why a common tenet of veganism is to practice it only insofar as it is practicable. I draw the line at my sickness or death, because fundamentally I’m an animal just like those I’d otherwise seek to protect. I suppose I believe life is sacred, period, and that humans aren’t innately special fauna on earth. I don’t see a need for a cow to die for my enjoyment, just as I wouldn’t kill someone’s pet or another human. You’re right though, I opened with murder because indeed I see it as unnecessary, cruel, and beyond reason. Not all cases are like this though, and I don’t think all meat eating needs to end. I should add too that I don’t believe many (if any, it would be a vanishingly small proportion) are in farming to be cruel. I’m confident most farmers think they’re doing a good thing and taking good care of their livestock. I simply believe they are wrong, though. Using an animal’s body for profit strikes me as a fundamentally unkind thing to do to a sentient being. |
If that's your qualifier, then anyone with access to agriculture with modern fertilization (and supplements) does not need it, including indigenous groups in North America (and others could be relocated - maybe they'll be receptive if you tell them it will make them better people). At any rate I don't believe that survival needs to be on the line in order to justify consuming meat. Regarding beef, it's currently the most egregious carbon emitter in agriculture and so I see reducing it's consumption as a positive that people will respond to. I expect "cease consuming meat" would be less effective messaging.
You mentioned spear fishing. Sardines don't have a cerebral cortex, which to me puts them on the level of insects. Unfortunately we have to rely on intuition when judging animal consciousness, but I think it's accurate to say even vegans do not generally have misgivings about killing bugs in their house. These are of course beings that can sense pain, but it's not clear to what extent they're conscious. Mentioned because: I think the meaning of sanctity itself is bent in arbitrary ways. The greens appear to disapprove of impact of humans on nature across the board, notwithstanding that our very existence greatly disrupts nature as our numbers scale. The trees and plants are also sacred, it seems, but not so sacred that we can't reap some arbitrary amount. The insects are sacred, but it doesn't matter what happens to them. Pre-civilization is romanticized by ancoms as keeping a balance with nature it never has.
> I simply believe they are wrong, though.
Right, I mentioned in another post that there is fundamental disagreement as to what poor treatment of animals constitutes. I think discourse gets distorted/unproductive if we ignore the difference in values, so it's good to get it out in the open if people are to identity problems they can all agree on. I expect most people, if you poll them, would say they favor measures to reduce harm to farm animals, even if they'd still consume them.