After reading some posts about animal welfare, ecofriendly living, and the likes, it got me thinking about the general state of society. Regardless of what your stance is on veganism vs omnivorism, capitalism vs statism, democracy vs totalitarianism, and all the other ways to divide our beliefs in how society should be, I would like you to think
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Sorry for that. You're post brought that to mind. If you're interested, read this article on Formosa Plastics:
http://www.etaiwannews.com/etn/news_content.php?id=1208369&lang=eng_news
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Unfortunately, there's a lot of dumps in the world. I will take that bike ride, though not in the hopes of seeing it :P
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We are animals, just as dogs are, as cows are, as sharks, as tigers. Why people think it's so bloody sinful for us to eat animals when other animals do is beyond me. Some say "well we're better than that." Really? I don't think so.
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Honestly, looking to non-human animals for how to behave is silly. There are non-human animals out there that behave better than most of us, and there are those that don't. None of that changes how we should behave.
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The different is, humans belong to a greater being" society and the survival of this society depends on our moral fabric, which in turn is why many of those things are crimincal. But guess what, eating meat isn't one of them.
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Our adaptability is probably our greatest survival tool.
As far as morality goes, there have been a lot of ethicists and philosophers over the past few hundred years that have made very good arguments against eating animals, because it is in our best interest a a society not to do so. Bentham is a good argument. His main argument was based on the fact that people who killed and butchered animals become violent and have higher incidences of spousal and child abuse than the rest of the population.
You also have people like Leo Tolstoy, who wrote the rather famous line "As long as there are slaughterhouses, there will be battlefields".
But, most interestingly, none of what you wrote here is actually a reason why we should or shouldn't use animals.
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Just my point. We should when we can, because we can. We shouldn't when it isn't appropriate. The rules that define when we can and can't are entirely up to us as a society. It's all a big paradox.
"people who killed and butchered animals become violent and have higher incidences of spousal and child abuse than the rest of the population."
It may be statistically true but just because it is more likely, doesn't mean they will, which makes that argument baseless.
"As long as there are slaughterhouses, there will be battlefields".
Find me a politician who runs a slaughterhouse himself and I'll believe it. Otherwise it is completely irrelevant.
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In an effort to be the devil's advocate here, we should not treat animals like we treat humans. We should treat humans like we treat animals. That way, it's a fair playing field for everyone involved.
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How can we justify using them for our own ends when they are sentient and have their own desires?
Generally speaking, we do not need to eat animals to survive, we do not need to use them for entertainment, beasts of burden or anything else. We choose to continue doing so because that is what we have always done, and, most importantly, because we enjoy it.
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Just a note on this, because that sentiment comes up a lot (and it drives me crazy)-- It really isn't black an white from the non-human animal's perspective, and that is the moral imperative from which veganism stems.
If you take a similar statement, with a similarly violent outcome and replace it with a human as the subject, then you create outrage and anger. That fact that that statement does not illicit the same feelings when talking about non-human animals is because of the prejudice (aka: speciesism) I mentioned in my first comment.
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