Personally i am of the opinion that if we can eat meat, we can use animals to further other similarly important goals. While i wouldn't be a fan of kitten skeet shooting, if it took a few kittens to cure aids, have at 'er. Every person has the point at which they will kill an animal, maybe it is when it is going to kill you, maybe it is when you would be starving to death and there is no choice, but strip away all the posturing, there is not a single person who can say they would never kill an animal. Besides someone who is suicidal that is.
edit: I use "you" a lot - I am not referring to sadhatter, but other humans in general. Sorry for any confusion.
Well, that's the thing. A vegan lifestyle kills
tons of animals. Everyone admits that it is impossible to get the exact numbers, but by many calculations vegetarians kill more animals with their diet (lots of bunnys, rats, wild hogs, etc., get killed in the fields) than does a moderate meat eater. That statement, will, of course, bring on people arguing that the numbers are wrong. Sure, why not, let's stipulate the numbers are wrong. The fact remains that plenty of mammals die so that you (vegetarian you) may eat.
That of course ignores all the animals that die due to getting hit by the trucks transporting the veges, the fish that die in the hydroelectric plant generating the electricity that is running your computer so they can post their outrage, the animals killed by drilling for oil, the animals you personally run over on the way to work, etc.
I don't buy that people really equate animals with humans (except, the few, like Buddhists in monasteries that walk the talk and go to every extreme to avoid even stepping on a bug). Because I would
never, ever drive my car at 65mph through a children's playground, even if it looked empty, nor would any sane person, yet we do it in the "living rooms" of the animals living around us. I'm left to conclude that anyone that does so, thinking animals are our equals, is either a moral monster, or don't truly believe what they say. I'm open to a third explanation, but I honestly can't see one.
I can't put a number on it, but let's say a conscientious vegetarian has from 10 to 1000 mammal lives on their hands. Why that number? Well, I doubt under 10 is realistic, and after 1000, why does it matter? "It's moral to kill 1000 of my peers to live, but not 2000"? No. By 1000 or so you are a monster. I can't say where I'd draw the line - I go about my life, driving my car, knowing there is a small chance that my actions will result in the death of a few humans. It's terribly easy to say this typing safely from my chair, but I'd hope that by the time I knew my actions were going to kill, say, 100 people, that I'd take drastic measures to change my life.
And, none of that is an argument "therefore, eat meat!". The point is that you
could choose a lifestyle to minimize animal deaths ( stating the obvious solution would get me banned, and is one that Ingrid seems to more or less support for herself, as she has said she'd rather she didn't exist because of the toll humans do to the planet), but, you don't. Is my head count, a meat heater, higher than a vegetarian's? Perhaps (depending on how you crunch the numbers). Does that give the vege room for the moral high ground, given how close the numbers really are? Not in my book.