Total Members Voted: 32
I'd like to, but you won't concede something as slight as the fact that one is more immoral than the other, regardless of if that difference is on a Planck-level or a macro-level.
This is the thing I've been trying to state this entire time, and no matter what I do to say that, you keep bringing it back to veganism.
The fact that you feel you need to convince me anything of veganism, again, shows how much of an assumption you're making of me.
this isn't a problem of veganism vs a traditional diet. It's a problem of utilitarianism and pragmatism.
Without having read any of this thread: is this going to be about how even hunting for food provides fun because people enjoy eating meat?
Here it is:If you're going to kill something, don't waste it. there is the entire point, in one sentence.
Store-bought meat came up, again, as continuing the notion that you introduced pages before this: that you shouldn't hunt because you can just go to the store. I added that preservatives, plus poor farming standards, aren't exactly the best alternative just to try and help flesh it out a bit since it didn't catch on in the first place.
I am frustrated, yes, but more because of this apparent communication barrier. We shouldn't be talking past each other, especially considering that this is all from an offhanded comment I made on the topic in an attempt to put it back on track and get it away from veganism and anti-natalism.
And I know you're point: all hunting is bad, so don't do it.
Eat plant-based food instead of meat.
You can try to avoid using the word all you want, but it's incredibly obvious that it's the intent of this thread by this point.
If that wasn't the point of contention, then don't ask if "there is a difference between hunting for sport and hunting for food".
People have given differences, you've just handwaved them away as not being the point of contention.
As I stated earlier, when I was more composed, you've either done an abysmal job of explaining your point from the start or you're pushing veganism.
Which you never address the part where I tell you that I'm not disagreeing.
Killing things is bad, yes. I've just said that killing for sport is worse than killing for food sense you're not going to use it to the same extent.
Hunting for sport creates more waste.
If you wanted to talk about how unethical killing things was, then state that in the OP.
It's very frustrating explaining why I chose my response to your original statement and being told that it's wrong based on the standards of an (until the past hour) unstated goal.