[identity profile] enders-shadow.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] talkpolitics


So, I first saw this as just an amusing macro.
Then I got the book in the pic as a xmas gift. I have been working my way through it. It's not a straight-up case for vegetarianism. It is written by a vegetarian--who admits as much. But from my reading of his work the authors point isn't to convert you, but to inform you and let you decide.

Now, I'm not a vegetarian. But I may become one. This book is making me pause and think.

Also I think I should say this early on: what I am discussing generally applies to the "first world". In places where food choices are not as plentiful as in the US or other industrialized and developed nations, perhaps the "choice" to eat an animal is one that is easily made as it's eat the animal or starve. So, forgive me if this doesn't exactly apply to you: I know we have an international crew here, but hear me out, if you would.

(for the sake of this post, I shall use "animals" to mean non-human animals)

We can all agree that animals have feelings, right?
Any of us who have had dogs or cats as pets know that they can feel pain, e.g. when we accidentally step on their tail, they shriek in pain and we acknowledge that. We use pain to teach our pets: if a dog does something he shouldn't we give him a thwack on the nose (not too hard of course, but enough to let him know: "don't do that!")

We imprison Micheal Vick for his dog-fights, right?

So we all agree animals can feel pain. And if you don't like my stated assumption that will not be contested in this post (looking at you, horse lover) you can ignore my post. There will not be a discussion of if animals feel pain here. It is assumed and accepted that they do.

Now, dogs aren't so different from pigs or chickens. Yes, there is a difference between them, but there's no reason to assume that pigs, turkeys, chickens and cattle don't feel pain.

Now, if you don't know, you should know that 95%+ of the meat eaten in the US is factory farmed. Now, factory farms are quite what you might imagine them to be. Gigantic "farms" that operate like a factory. The humane element has been removed and replaced with cold efficiency. If baby pigs aren't of the proper size, they will be picked up by their hind legs and have their heads smacked into the concrete floor and then tossed down a chute waiting for the truck that collects all the many pigs killed this way.

The horrors of factory farming are nearly too long to list. Not only do they morally mutilate those who must work in such factory farms, but they also cause significant health risks to humans. Factory farmed animals are fed antibiotics before they are sick--because the "farmers" (more appropriate might be: "factory owners") realize the conditions that their animals live in are so atrocious that they are *expecting* them to get sick.

Then there's the environmental damages done due to the billions of pounds of shit these animals produce. Now, usually shit can be useful as manure--right? But this shit is loaded with all sorts of crap (like antibiotics) and is created in such a quantity that it is not so great for the planet.

Then there's the fact that to produce all the meat we eat, we must feed the animals--and there are starving children who would very much like the food we give to our farmed animals. And yet, we don't. We give it to Bessie so we can have a nice big burger later.

So, I am here asking for help. Tell me, how may I order my next bacon cheeseburger without lamenting the utterly cruel treatment that my burger was built from? The expected death and suffering of factory farmed animals is documented and proven. There's an annual % of the animals *expected* to die at the farm, in transport, and an expected % of them who will not be stunned properly before being killed and an expected % of them will be improperly killed and thus suffer longer than needed. These expected percentages are such because the goal of factory farms is to make money: not to produce animal meat that comes from animals that were treated humanly. We treat our animals with no humanity--nor humanely. We speed up the process that animals are raised in by genetically mutating them. Turkeys on factory farms are *incapable* of reproducing on their own. The insanity of it all is just too much.

So yes, help me. I love my bacon cheeseburgers. They taste AMAZING.
But how can I ever order another one?

Is it as easy as:


And again: in places where meat is a needed part of the diet to fend off starvation, this doesn't apply. But in the US and Europe where factory farming is the predominant method of getting animal meat--can we really allow the cruelty to animals to continue? When we buy food at the supermarket for our BBQ aren't we really farming by proxy and thus supporting the inhumane treatment of our factory farmed animals? Do we need laws to prevent the inhumane treatment of animals? or should we all just be vegetarians and reduce the demand for meat so that the industry doesn't need to fit 5000 chickens in a space that could humanely fit 100?

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 20:08 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] telemann.livejournal.com
Oh I wasn't saying they feel pain, I was just noting they don't have a brain. I have salt water aquariums, and I'm amazed they can apparently sense bright lights, and have incredible sense of smell. When I put a shrimp past the surface of the water, I can see the starfishs' arms start coming out as in a way to say "FEED ME SEYMOUR!" lol. I think starfish can feel something though: when I feed a small shrimp to the big brittle star fish, it kind of tugs when I pull back on the shrimp.
Edited Date: 15/2/11 20:09 (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 20:20 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] spaz-own-joo.livejournal.com
See, we're all making guesses about the internal states of animals based on their behaviour! If we dissected a starfish using whatever fictitious high-resolution neural imaging technology we might invent, we'd be hard-pressed to point at an event or a neural cluster and say "that one means ouch." But just the same, we anthropomorphize the starfish by ascribing these "sentiments" to their stimulus-response patterns, giving them cute little exclaimed quotations that imply a higher-order sense of intent!

What no one's really comfortable admitting but is unavoidably true, is that this is also what we do to other humans. Their stimulus-response patterns are many orders of magnitude more complex, but the underlying problem is the same.

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 22:48 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] spaz-own-joo.livejournal.com
but the question of what sorts of creatures can feel pain just is an other-minds problem!

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 20:16 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] meus-ovatio.livejournal.com
I think starfish have like this cool and weird nervous system that operates independently at all ends of the starfish... that is, there is no head, no front... just five arms and they all take the lead as the situation requires.

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 20:24 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] telemann.livejournal.com
Yeah octopusesese are like that too. But much higher up on the scale of intelligence. They're extremely intelligent, but were evolutionarily cock-blocked by the fact there was no generational learning-- the mother dies before she can teach them anything. So every generation starts all over again. But some scientists are now reporting there seems to be generational learning occurring.

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 23:01 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-rukh.livejournal.com
They're also not very tasty.

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 23:07 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] telemann.livejournal.com
They're eaten by Chinese all the time.

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 23:15 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-rukh.livejournal.com
The Chinese bind their tastebuds to make them look smaller.

(no subject)

Date: 15/2/11 23:18 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] telemann.livejournal.com
Prolly more tasty in tempura batter, no doubt!

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