Macgyver1968
Philosopher
Ever notice that PETA never throws red paint on hip-hop stars that wear fur? 
Define what you mean by 'good cause'.
Remember, PETA is not just pushing for better treatment of animals. They are supposedly pushing for an equality between humans and animals. This means:
- No eating of meat
- No medical research on animals. Say goodbye to around 90% of all medical research into things like AIDS
- No use of animal products of any type. Ok, maybe not having fur coats isn't such a hardship. But many heart operations (some use pig valves), flu vaccines (chicken eggs) and other treatments that save lives would no longer be possible.
And then their is the fact that PETA ended up killing dozens of animals left at its shelters.
If you want to try to make sure animals have a 'good life', give to your local humane society (or a respectable nature preservation group).
However, Exceptions can be made for insulin-dependant Sr. VP's of the group.- No medical research on animals. Say goodbye to around 90% of all medical research into things like AIDS
- No use of animal products of any type.
I'd say its ok to slaughter animals for food, infect them diseases and cancers, and use their organs for transplantation only in the areas where it would be acceptable to use a mentally similar human in the exact same way.Define what you mean by 'good cause'.
Remember, PETA is not just pushing for better treatment of animals. They are supposedly pushing for an equality between humans and animals. This means:
- No eating of meat
- No medical research on animals. Say goodbye to around 90% of all medical research into things like AIDS
- No use of animal products of any type. Ok, maybe not having fur coats isn't such a hardship. But many heart operations (some use pig valves), flu vaccines (chicken eggs) and other treatments that save lives would no longer be possible.
I think you need to update your anti-PETA cheatsheet:However, Exceptions can be made for insulin-dependant Sr. VP's of the group.
.In the 1980s, researchers used genetic engineering to manufacture a human insulin. In 1982, the Eli Lilly Corporation produced a human insulin that became the first approved genetically engineered pharmaceutical product. Without needing to depend on animals, researchers could produce genetically engineered insulin in unlimited supplies. It also did not contain any of the animal contaminants. Using human insulin also took away any concerns about transferring any potential animal diseases into the insulin. While companies still sell a small amount of insulin produced from animals—mostly porcine—from the 1980s onwards, insulin users increasingly moved to a form of human insulin created through recombinant DNA technology. According to the Eli Lilly Corporation, in 2001 95% of insulin users in most parts of the world take some form of human insulin. Some companies have stopped producing animal insulin completely. Companies are focusing on synthesizing human insulin and insulin analogs, a modification of the insulin molecule in some way.
posted, but all I can do is shrug. It's a body - who cares if it is turned into a purse or whatever? It surely doesn't change my opinions about animal treatment. Better to be made into a purse than rot in a vault in the earth.i shrieked in appalled delight when i first started reading this jaw-dropping ode to the-power-of-extremes & its message... Getting a grip on the giggling fit that hit next, i added insult to injured ears with an oratory @ the auspicious 'human bbq'. - but false bravura faltered fast as my mind absorbed the powerful simplicity of each vivid image, compounding truth on every word.
Yes, Insulin can now be produced that contains no animal products (that's why I didn't mention it earlier... I wanted to stick to places where animal products are either superior or have no alternatives.)I think you need to update your anti-PETA cheatsheet:However, Exceptions can be made for insulin-dependant Sr. VP's of the group.
In the 1980s, researchers used genetic engineering to manufacture a human insulin. In 1982, the Eli Lilly Corporation produced a human insulin that became the first approved genetically engineered pharmaceutical product. Without needing to depend on animals, researchers could produce genetically engineered insulin in unlimited supplies....
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And NO PETS! (or slaves, as PETA calls them) Don't forget that.Remember, PETA is not just pushing for better treatment of animals. They are supposedly pushing for an equality between humans and animals. This means:
- No eating of meat
- No medical research on animals. Say goodbye to around 90% of all medical research into things like AIDS
- No use of animal products of any type. Ok, maybe not having fur coats isn't such a hardship. But many heart operations (some use pig valves), flu vaccines (chicken eggs) and other treatments that save lives would no longer be possible.
Understandable, since back in 1990 (when the quote would have been made) media organizations were not posting things on the internet.http://216.239.41.104/search?q=cach...fe+to+fight+for+the+rights+of+animals.”&hl=enThat link didn't work for me, so it's difficult to trace back the source of that quote.
I don't want to Godwin the thread, but consider the following: in WWII, Nazis performed medical experiments on POWs, some where more dubious than others. In particular, there were problems where their pilots would pass out when flying in high altitudes or making sharp banked turns at high speed, there were problems where soldiers would storm a shore in cold water only to die of hypothermia 10 minutes after arriving on shore. So, using the POWs, researchers performed experiments using people in vacuum chambers, high-G centrifuges, sitting in ice tanks, blood transfusions, severing and reattaching limbs, organ transplantations, and so on to determine how to revive them.I could also point out that even if she never touched a drop of insulin that contained animal products, they wouldn't have even developed insulin treatments had they not done testing on animals first.
I'd say its ok to slaughter animals for food, infect them diseases and cancers, and use their organs for transplantation only in the areas where it would be acceptable to use a mentally similar human in the exact same way.
I believe that you you are assuming your conclusion (that people and animals are morally equivelent).There is a huge amount of life-saving medical knowledge which has unethical origins. If the claim that the discovery of insulin from animal testing justifies animal testing, then an equivalent and equally persuasive argument can be made to justify human experimentation.
The difference is.... I'm not the one trying to "claim the moral high ground".I don't want to Godwin the thread, but consider the following: in WWII, Nazis performed medical experiments on POWs, some where more dubious than others.
...
There is a huge amount of life-saving medical knowledge which has unethical origins. If the claim that the discovery of insulin from animal testing justifies animal testing, then an equivalent and equally persuasive argument can be made to justify human experimentation.
I believe that you you are assuming your conclusion (that people and animals are morally equivelent).