Quote from: Ásgeirr on July 06, 2018, 11:05:19 AMQuote from: Verbatim on July 05, 2018, 11:35:17 PMQuote from: Ásgeirr on July 05, 2018, 09:30:38 PMThat guide really underestimates how bad vegan food tastes like. i think you're overestimating how much it mattersvegan food could taste like literal, actual shit, and i wouldn't stop being a vegan or being an advocateit helps that it actually doesn't taste that bad, thoughFor you.Do you think being misinformed is why more people arent vegan?Gonna go out on a limb here and say no. I'd imagine that many people are aware of what this might mean for the treatment of animals but continue eating meat because it's tasty, because switching to vegan can take a lot of effort and be more expensive and because they're just used to it.
Quote from: Verbatim on July 05, 2018, 11:35:17 PMQuote from: Ásgeirr on July 05, 2018, 09:30:38 PMThat guide really underestimates how bad vegan food tastes like. i think you're overestimating how much it mattersvegan food could taste like literal, actual shit, and i wouldn't stop being a vegan or being an advocateit helps that it actually doesn't taste that bad, thoughFor you.Do you think being misinformed is why more people arent vegan?
Quote from: Ásgeirr on July 05, 2018, 09:30:38 PMThat guide really underestimates how bad vegan food tastes like. i think you're overestimating how much it mattersvegan food could taste like literal, actual shit, and i wouldn't stop being a vegan or being an advocateit helps that it actually doesn't taste that bad, though
That guide really underestimates how bad vegan food tastes like.
For you.Do you think being misinformed is why more people arent vegan?
Quote from: Verbatim on July 06, 2018, 04:19:14 AMQuote from: FatherlyNick on July 06, 2018, 03:56:38 AMIs free-range farming a cow for milk / cheese okay?nope, because that cow's milk is still not really for you to consume, and the cow itself still does not exist for you to exploit, even if you treat it as nicely as possiblei'd have to concede that it's much less shitty to do it that way (or at least, the idea of it is), but it's still highly unnecessaryhow do you feel about free range chickens for eggs?
Quote from: FatherlyNick on July 06, 2018, 03:56:38 AMIs free-range farming a cow for milk / cheese okay?nope, because that cow's milk is still not really for you to consume, and the cow itself still does not exist for you to exploit, even if you treat it as nicely as possiblei'd have to concede that it's much less shitty to do it that way (or at least, the idea of it is), but it's still highly unnecessary
Is free-range farming a cow for milk / cheese okay?
What about the fact that several animals suffer when they're not treated that way? Not milking cows can have pretty serious negative effects for their health and the same applies for other animals (sheep not being shaved, for example). Should we just stop milking or shaving them and just accept that it will harm millions of animals or do you suggest we do those things but then just throw away and waste all of the resources?
Quote from: Eli on July 06, 2018, 06:06:40 AMQuote from: Verbatim on July 06, 2018, 04:19:14 AMQuote from: FatherlyNick on July 06, 2018, 03:56:38 AMIs free-range farming a cow for milk / cheese okay?nope, because that cow's milk is still not really for you to consume, and the cow itself still does not exist for you to exploit, even if you treat it as nicely as possiblei'd have to concede that it's much less shitty to do it that way (or at least, the idea of it is), but it's still highly unnecessaryhow do you feel about free range chickens for eggs?i feel like "free range" in general is a meme used to obfuscate what actually goes on, just to reassure people and make them feel like they're not actually doing anything unethicalgood article on the subject that will be disregarded as biased and non-factual
That doesn't seem to be very logically consistent.
The animals are there. They're alive and well regardless of whether they were bred to be a certain them. Killing millions of them off doesn't seem very humane or fair especially when they can lead pretty normal and "fulfilling" lives by the standards of animals like them.
There's very few pets would be able to survive in the wild either, yet I doubt you advocate for a genocide of dogs, rabbits, birds, horses and so on for that reason.
while also letting their "materials" go to waste even though they could ease the suffering of heaps of poor and hungry people.
How do you feel about hunting in order to control the population? How about killing off and eating invasive species that are destroying the environment such as Florida's lionfish?
Quote from: Vien on July 06, 2018, 10:10:29 PMHow do you feel about hunting in order to control the population? How about killing off and eating invasive species that are destroying the environment such as Florida's lionfish?i've shifted my thoughts on this frequently, but i've come to the conclusion (i think) that population control is a fair cause for that sort of thing—but there are other (perhaps better) solutions, such as reintroduction, because the only reason we need to do such things in the first place is because of overhuntingthe reason you might have a deer problem, for example, is because we hunted too many wolves—whose ecological function is to keep deer in check—so of course the deer population is going to risereintroducing more wolves into the wilderness would solve the issue, but i won't sit here and tell you that a deer being mauled to death by a wolf is a whole lot better than being shot by a human—it's a pretty fucked up game we have to play, when you think about itthat said, i'm not sure what preys on lionfish—sharks, maybe? not sure how that works
Verbatim never has any real solution apart from kill everybody and everything.
You're ignoring that there is no magical button though.
The logical inconsistency seems to lie in you basing all of this on respect for agency and an aversion of suffering, yet you seem to be perfectly fine with imposing (or ignoring) suffering and violating and killing untold amounts of animals because you're the superior creature who gets to decide how they're treated.
Life is bad because it comes with suffering. You can reduce the suffering of billions of creatures by taking some control of their agency. But doing so and not respecting them is bad from a moral point of view. Since you're telling me they can't live a purposeful life (something you're deciding for that animal) you advocate killing them all which not only causes suffering but also violates their autonomy in the most significant way and goes directly against their deepest and most fundamental desire.
I'm also puzzled by what you imagine a purposeful life would be like for an animal.
So what do we do with the ones that live now? Set them free, something which will likely cause more suffering than just treating them properly for the rest of their lives? Kill off healthy animals with years left to live, something which will violate them more gravely than anything else? Seems like no matter the choice, you're going against a core aspect of your philosophy.
I guess that logical inconsistency I see is that you advocate killing them all (which violates, disrespects and harms the animals and their agency/autonomy)
because you think they can't have any sort of purposeful life anyways (which is kind of your own speciest argument where we get to do whatever we want and treat these creatures in any way because we're superior and get to decide what's worthwhile or right/wrong for them).
Killing them violates their autonomy and puts you in a position of superiority enforcing your views on the animal. Setting them free will cause mayhem and enormous amounts of pain, fear and suffering for millions of creatures. Perhaps letting them live on in humane conditions and continue being milked/shaved is both less of an invasion of their agency and overall causes them a lower amount of suffering.
okay then how do you feel about farmers that raise chickens like any other pet and sell the eggs
Quote from: Flee on July 07, 2018, 04:17:35 AMYou're ignoring that there is no magical button though.It's nothing that couldn't be invented.
Quote from: Flee on July 07, 2018, 04:17:35 AMThe logical inconsistency seems to lie in you basing all of this on respect for agency and an aversion of suffering, yet you seem to be perfectly fine with imposing (or ignoring) suffering and violating and killing untold amounts of animals because you're the superior creature who gets to decide how they're treated.Of course—do you not think parents should have some degree of control over their children's behavior? Sometimes you have to override someone's agency for the greater good. Again, there is no inconsistency here. I'm not expressing anything I haven't expressed for years upon years.
Quote from: MarKhan on July 07, 2018, 01:23:31 PM I'm surprised that nobody brought this up yet, but veganism is not a perfect solution. Veganism saves animals at the cost of killing plants. Well, so what is the problem with this? The problem is that we showing preference for animals over plants. Reason why it`s acceptable is that plants are harder to extinquish than animals and we extinquished quite a lot of animals in the past, but that doesn`t mean that plants are impossible to extinquish and world is not set in stone. There might come time when we have to kill animals in order to save plants, which brings me to second point: Being vegan or not being vegan is fine as long as you don`t extinquish either animals or plants. We just happen to live in time when animals are closer to dying than plants.How the hell are we gonna extinguish plants we literally grow them. Cows, pigs, and chickens are also nowhere near extinction.
I'm surprised that nobody brought this up yet, but veganism is not a perfect solution. Veganism saves animals at the cost of killing plants. Well, so what is the problem with this? The problem is that we showing preference for animals over plants. Reason why it`s acceptable is that plants are harder to extinquish than animals and we extinquished quite a lot of animals in the past, but that doesn`t mean that plants are impossible to extinquish and world is not set in stone. There might come time when we have to kill animals in order to save plants, which brings me to second point: Being vegan or not being vegan is fine as long as you don`t extinquish either animals or plants. We just happen to live in time when animals are closer to dying than plants.
Quote from: Flee on July 07, 2018, 04:17:35 AMLife is bad because it comes with suffering. You can reduce the suffering of billions of creatures by taking some control of their agency. But doing so and not respecting them is bad from a moral point of view. Since you're telling me they can't live a purposeful life (something you're deciding for that animal) you advocate killing them all which not only causes suffering but also violates their autonomy in the most significant way and goes directly against their deepest and most fundamental desire.Their deepest and most fundamental desire is to copulate and reproduce, not to live. No animal wants to "live." They just don't want to die. They don't understand why they don't want to die (or why they'd be better off dead). They're just running a primitive biological script that tells them that dying is bad, survival is good. For what reason? There is no reason. So, we could pointlessly maintain their pitiful, pointless, joyless existences to make ourselves feel moral, but the reality is that most factory-bred animals wouldn't well appreciate it. A lot of them live in squalor, are missing body parts, are severely overweight, or have various other debilitating conditions. They may not want to die, but they certainly don't want to suffer, either. But they are suffering. And you want to maintain it for some reason, with bizarre pathos-based reasoning.
It depends on what you define as killing off everything. If by that we mean to kill of every single person, animal or plant, we can just continuosly nuke same place over and over again until our nukes reach magnetic core of Earth and disrupt it, which cause magnetic field of Earth to dissapear and everything to die from radiation sooner or later, well almost everything. Some things will survive and adapt to new conditions. It`s however, a temporary solution, it probably be enough to put our planet down long enough until Sun explode or whatever happens to it.Well, we might create a black hole, but it`s unreliable solution either, because no one knows how it works. I can only say that living or being in it, if it`s possible, will be different from your or any other human definition of word "living" or "being" so that accomplishes goal of destroying everything living.
I see another logic inconsistency - you are proposing us veganism, main purpose of which is to save animals and the next thing you say is that it`s better to kill everything. Well, then I really don`t see any other reason for this thread to exist outside of "the sake of argument", "simulation purposes", where you try to attain higher moral ground over people who aren`t vegans and thats basically a hypocrisy.