Kenickie
Bluelight Crew
if you aren't vegan, i don't think it matters either way what you eat.
So if I feel like eating a baby or a kitten, I should just eat one?
Not a child, but anything less than a human, sure.
I'd rather not eat highly intelligent animals like dolphins and cats personally.
If you have no problem with eating puppies, and you don't give a shit about the welfare of any creature that doesn't belong to your own species, then that's up to you.
If someone creates a post about whether or not it's okay to stand on mice for entertainment purposes, you could just as easily say: "Yeah fuck it, stand on those little cunts."
What about a dead baby?
Or a terminally ill baby?
Or a young human fetus that is going to be aborted?
Or an aborted fetus?
Um, oysters are really good for you... Why should they be avoided?
(Oysters are better for you than honey as far as I know.)
:D
So you'd honestly have no problem eating dolphins, dogs, monkeys or cats?
Re: the consumption of a pre-conscious (prior to 16 weeks a fetus doesn't have a functional brain) fetus that is going to be aborted anyway - wouldn't it be better to eat that then to deprive another more intelligent creature (everything is more intelligent than an undeveloped fetus), say a dolphin, of life?
Many animal species eat miscarried fetuses and afterbirth, etc.
Because oysters are filters, they filter out the toxins in the water in which they live.
Therefore, they tend to contain large amounts of toxins.
If you feel so strongly about the subject of dolphins or dogs and cats being eaten, why not head over to Japan to protest the dolphin hunting, then stop over at Korea to protest domestic animal consumption?
But, I'll advocate for somebody else's right to eat whatever animal they want--short of human beings in any form, living or dead, fetus or functioning.
objectively, the event is certainly a harm in all the independant adult life the person was denied, even though they are not aware of it.
i have eaten dog, but i didn't know what it was until after
I worked with people with acquired brain injuries for years and although I do see your point I think there is a massive distinction between the consumption of a person with limited awareness (I have never encountered someone with an ABI who does not have some idea of who and where they are) and an oyster.
When you deprive a person of life, it affects their family and friends and they are deprived of the pleasures that they would otherwise experience in life.
Whereas oysters don't experience pleasures, so although you are denying them the latter part of their adult life what does that really mean?
Ignoring the term "animal", isn't eating an oyster closer to eating a cabbage, then it is eating a rabbit?
What was your reaction when you found out?
And if you ate a kitten or a great ape, and then found out later, would you have the same reaction?
Thanks for contributing to the subject rather than dismissing the topic at hand.
I eat plant and animal equally. Ethically, i feel that it is the same to eat either.
The only moral argument that I agree with in terms of harvesting one's food is the manner with which the lives of those plants or animals are cultivated. Caged versus free range chickens for instance. I still do not elect to live a vegetarian or vegan lifestyle because i don't think that that would make a difference. There are better ways to ensure animal cruelties are kept to a minimum, such as tight regulations on the food industry.
Probably. I am less critical when "i'm a guest in someone else's house". Know what i mean?
You honestly see no difference between eating corn and eating a dolphin?
What about endangered species?
Realistically the food industry is never going to offer quality of life to livestock.
To say that not eating meat makes no difference seems to be a denial of personal responsibility. Couldn't you apply that attitude to all manner of immoral acts?
"Due to the high frequency of this admittedly immoral act occurring in society, it makes no difference whether or not I contribute to it."
More and more cattle are being raised in increasingly tight spaces in order to satisfy demand. If a billion people stopped eating meat, then that demand wouldn't continue to increase at the same rate. Although you can't make the decisions for the other 999,999,999 people, you can contribute.
I'm not saying that you should, but to say that you cannot make a difference isn't true.
You can make a very very small difference.
I understand how you wouldn't verbally object and throw the plate at your father-in-law's head, but that doesn't mean that it wouldn't affect you in some way. Chimpanzees share 98% of the same DNA. It's pretty close to cannibalism.
I don't agree that boycotts work.
I believe i CAN make a difference, by selecting my food conscientiously, by supporting political campaigns against animal cruelty, etc.
I do not see the difference simply by the labels "animal" or "vegetable".