John Stossel Goes After PETA Tonight...

I have friends who are vegitarian, and that's fine. When I visit them I eat their food without complaint, and when they visit me I make sure they have selections that are acceptable to their diet. If they do it for health reasons, that's great. If they do it for philosophical reasons, I can respect that too even if I don't do the same.

Indeed. That's the same thing I do. There is a lot of very tasty vegetarian food, just like there is a lot of very tasty non-vegetarian food. I even ask people to teach me how to do new vegetarian dishes, but that's because I like to cook, and to accomodate vegetarians nicely, rather than with the ugly American's "here is your salad and beans".

I don't tell them what to eat. They don't try to tell me what to eat.
 
Yet you fail to state what is wrong with the argument.

#define SARCASM 1
Why should he? He called you names, so he wins!
#undef SARCASM

I think it's easier to call names than it is to actually respond to a realistic argument. Didn't say good, just, fair, but it may be easier, especially if one is trying to push their preference on everyone else.

I'm perfectly comfortable with my position at the top of the food chain, myself.
 
As you'll find there are a number of extremely vocal anti-animal rights "libertarians" on this board who, I'm sure, would argue that an initiation of force is absolutely wrong because it violates so-called "natural rights." The point is not the thought experiment -- meaning the specific responses -- but how people respond to it: they hesitate in one case while dismissing the other (correctly, in my opinion) as crazy. Do you see the thematic thread in my original post: that people are outraged -- outraged -- at the violence and "FORCE" of militant animal rights activists, yet completely indifferent to the consequences of their own lifestyle choices.

#define SING_LIKE_NEIL_YOUNG
Dont' bring me down,
It's only straw men burnin'
#undef SING_LIKE_NEIL_YOUNG

You know, given this kind of diatribe, the kind that presumes so much about the other side, it's really hard to communicate. One wonders if it's worth it.
 
Hey jj: Wanna hit the steakhouse at TAM 4?

Do you prefer steak sauce, or just some light seasoning on the meat?
 
This is unbelievably silly. Let us break down the animals under discussion into into two groups: 1) Domesticated animals; 2) Wild Animals.
Good thing you never pass out the ad-homs, eh?
Saying domesticated animals have it better than wild animals is to say nothing at all if two facts hold true: 1) domesticated animals suffer; 2) domesticated animals do not need to suffer (meaning, for example, that there are alternative sources of food). Not only are your claims highly questionable (with respect to animal welfare on factory farms) but they are irrelevant; a red-herring.
So, then, you support the idea that domesticated meat animals should be extinct? That's what you're implying when you say "domesticated animals do not need to suffer". Anything that lives, suffers.

Your second case was substantially missing.
 
That's what I mean. Why is it so hard not to ridicule vegetarism? Lack of conclusive arguments? Fear to be wrong after all?

Get it right. It's hard not to ridicule you.

It's easy not to ridicule all vegetarians.

Furthermore, why is a couple of people talking about eating meat ridiculing you?

Do you regard people who don't share your peculiar ethical standards as "ridiculing" you?
 
Hey jj: Wanna hit the steakhouse at TAM 4?

Do you prefer steak sauce, or just some light seasoning on the meat?

Not gonna be there, but I'll join you in spirit with a nice grilled ribeye on my patio. Medium Rare, glass of red on the side, big pile of salad on the other side. :)

No steak sauce.
 
So are you saying that anything that contains human DNA (and which DNA qualifies as 'human' is itself a problem) is worthy of moral consideration? Such that every living human cell is then morally equivalent to me or you? What about a transgenic bacterium that contains human DNA?

No. That is not what I am saying.

If you take a human mother, and a human father, and look at their offspring, the DNA markers in the offspring will match that of the parents. The same is true of a pair of goats. If you test the DNA of one of their kids, the kid's DNA will have markers that match it up to the sire and dam. The goat's DNA will never show that a human was the parent. (And if it did, talk about rights!! Book rights, movie rights...... :D )

I am not aware of animals that produce human beings as offspring. Nor am I aware of human parents producing, say, a goat as an offspring, with DNA that matches the parents. So far as I know, when humans breed the offspring produced have been humans. I don't see the difficulty.

I feel fully confident that I can tell the difference between a human and a cow, at dusk from across the corral.
 
Ah, yes, what would you raise on the high plains, then?
I'm not supporting armageddonman's argument, because I think it's complete and utter nonsense (and I'm a vegetarian, yet); but...

Marginal lands that are unsuitable for growing most food crops can still grow certain types of grains and other seed crops quite effectively. Hemp grows quite well in lands such as plans or some of the better scrub land; and hempseed is quite nutritious. Other crops like Amaranth and certain other "heirloom" grains and seed plants also grow fairly well, with varying yields.
 
It always amazes me that meat-avoiders always get incredibly aggressive in this kind of discussion. Do they feel threatened? Can't they discuss the topic without resorting to ridicule and rudeness?

Humans are evolved to have a diet that consists partially of meat. Why do meat-avoiders ignore this? Have they no respect for nature?

(err, do I need to mark this as parody?)
Unfortunately, there's a h3ll of a lot of rudeness and incivility on both sides of the issue.
 
Marginal lands that are unsuitable for growing most food crops can still grow certain types of grains and other seed crops quite effectively. Hemp grows quite well in lands such as plans or some of the better scrub land; and hempseed is quite nutritious. Other crops like Amaranth and certain other "heirloom" grains and seed plants also grow fairly well, with varying yields.

Indeed, I've encountered amaranth before. I'm not sure of the yield, but I wonder what the commercial viability of amaranth on arid lands is vs. that of, say, goats or sheep on the same land.

At least we're not talking Aticama-type land. I have no idea what one does with that, other than perhaps admire it.
 
Unfortunately, there's a h3ll of a lot of rudeness and incivility on both sides of the issue.

Well, I've certainly noticed that. On the other hand, most of what I see here in the revived part of the thread is scorn and moralizing at people who take a balanced approach. Included inthe scorn and moralizing are questionable philosophical stances (cain for instance), questionable scientific statements (more than one or two people get the medal for that one), and politics and preference disguised as ethics or morals.

And that annoys me. So it goes.
 
What is it that exists in humans making them moral agents that does not exist in any other animal?
Rick beat me to it but it is reason. Other animals are not capable of making moral judgements further they are not capable of understanding moral duty.

It can however mean that the basis on which one makes a moral distinction between animals and humans is flawed.
Yes, but then you would need to explain why it is flawed.
 
That's what I mean. Why is it so hard not to ridicule vegetarism? Lack of conclusive arguments? Fear to be wrong after all?
Why is it so hard not to ridicule right wing wackos? Why is it so hard not to ridicule George Bush?

I perceive idiocy therefore I ridicule.

Chill out dude, it is a God given right to mock those who stand against Truth, Justice and the American way. And eating old dead cow is the quintessential American way. If it wasn't then God (AKA Ed) wouldn't have created the prairies for the chosen to graze their cattle on.
 
You are right. It did not. It was merely a weak attempt to ridicule this discussion.

It's like a reflex non-vegetarians have when discussing this topic. These kind of commetnts always come up. Probably to show oneself and the audience what a tough guy one is.

Which brings me to another point: how come that so many people seem to think that not eating meat is somehow "un-manly"?
Dude, take a chill pill. There is nothing sacred about vegatarians. Some are cool. Some are idiots. Rik and I are willing to ridicule anyone so don't go giving me the self righteous BS.
 
As it so happens those "facts" -- if that's what we want to pretend to call them for a moment -- are highly questionable.
You see, all you have done is declared why I have only made claims and you haven't explained anything.

There's a rich literature on the subject worth exploring, but this goes beyond the purview of my posts (for the moment).
{blah blah blah}

Domesticated animals cope with different forms of abuse and distress.
Some do, some don't. I grew up on a farm and my own anecdotal evidence suggests that the vast majority of our animals lived largely free of stress. The roamed freely, had plenty of food and water and were treated for any illness.

To choose an example almost at random from those cited above, domesticated animals, for the most part, do not need to worry about getting enough food. Their ailments often stem from being over-fed. I'm not at all sure why you also listed "disease" and "injury" as a favorable comparison for your case...
Because laws, regulations and the interests of the farmer often work to the best interest of the animal. Not always and there are unquestionably some horror stories.

Is this where I say, "No, it isn't a fact"?
Why not, that is pretty much all you have done. I see litte argument in your posts. They are simply filled with invective and superfluous nonsense. You state I'm wrong and make claims without explaining anything.

...suppose intelligent alien life discovers human beings (or vice versa): are we to evaluate their DNA? What will give them rights? Or perhaps a less appealing scenario to reflect power imbalances: why should they recognize our rights?
Real simple answer. If they are capable of making moral judgments and comprehending moral duty then they should have rights. We should be granted rights because we are capable of making moral judgments and comprehending moral duty.

See, it really is quite simple.

So you're saying that it's just a convention?
No more than any other philosophy?

What about the people who contend that this human empathy is misplaced.
What about them?

1.) Logical reasoning is not an absolute law which governs the universe (Logic and Fallacies).

2.) Logic is not a set of rules which govern human behavior. Humans may have logically conflicting goals (Logic and Fallacies).

3) No moral philosophy can resolve all moral conflicts.

It's an unthinking warm-fuzzy.
This is just rhetoric.

They're ambitious future Senators and medical doctors who want to conduct experiments on cats. Here's the question: if somebody regularly tortures cats (say) and nobody ever learns about it, then did the torturer do anything morally wrong?
Mental masturbation. Great for philosophical discussion but it won't resolve the issues of whether or not animals are moral agents or are entitled to rights.

If you recognize these laws as legitimate then what argument can you provide if a lot of people decide that eating meat imposes unnecessary suffering?
What laws? Who are you suggesting that I provide this argument to?

To the people (whoever and however many they might be) who decide that eating meat imposes unnecessary suffering I would say they have that right. I would say to those who live in a democracy that they have the right to seek to change the laws so that society will conform to their way of living. Should society change and prohibit the consumption of meat I would likely follow the law. I would argue that eating meat does not need to impose any significant suffering. Of course, what is significant and what is necessary is in the eye of the beholder. Some believe that the mere fact that humans exist causes needless suffering because of the impact of humans on our environment.
 
Well-fed nations like India, where there were riots after McDonald's acknowledged their french-fries contained beef by-products?

Cows are sacred in the Hindu religion. It falls under the concept of Ahimsa. You could make a parallell to Orthodox Jews rioting because the "non-dairy" cheese they used on their cheeseburger actually contained dairy. Religious outrage is a bit more strong than moral outrage.
 
Evidences?

I see you have elected to flood the board with vacuous one-word or one sentence replies fused with embarrasing theatrics.

#define SING_LIKE_NEIL_YOUNG
Dont' bring me down,
It's only straw men burnin'
#undef SING_LIKE_NEIL_YOUNG

You know, given this kind of diatribe, the kind that presumes so much about the other side, it's really hard to communicate. One wonders if it's worth it.

However, you might as well be a useful idiot. Let's start at the top:

You request evidence for farming abuses? If you're genuinely serious about the issue then you might be interested in reading Matthew Scully's book _Dominion_. He's not a typical animal rights activist by any means. He's a Christian conservative (and in fact a former editor for _The National Review_). In terms of slaughterhouses and "distressed meat", see Gail Eisnitz's book _Slaughterhouse_.

As I've pointed out in umpteen previous threads there's a prima facie case against how the market would treat animals for one rather simple reason: animal welfare is subject to the profit considerations of cost-benefit calculus; their well-being is instrumental, not final. When transporting pigs to slaughter, for example, it might more worthwhile to overcrowd and risk death for a few, then to finance more humane accomodations. The comparison to slavery is again quite apropos.

Good thing you never pass out the ad-homs, eh?

Here again we have my two favorite accusations, neither of them on the mark (or anywhere) First there's the oblique reference to a straw man (in the lyrics above). Of course, in that instance (my quote) I was making an observation that still seems lost on the stubbornly stupid. Then we get the rather standard invocation of "ad hominem". Unfortunately, an ad hominem, as I constantly remind you imbeciles, is a personal in attack in the absence of an argument. That you cannot be bothered to engage the argument is as invigorating as it is wearisome. OK, in the long run perhaps it is a bit more wearisome.

So, then, you support the idea that domesticated meat animals should be extinct? That's what you're implying when you say "domesticated animals do not need to suffer". Anything that lives, suffers.

Your second case was substantially missing.

It's difficult to know if you're being serious; after all, you have a history of saying such colossally stupid things. Here you seem to be implying that since anything that lives suffers, this particular suffering (regardless of scale, apparently), is not relevant...? Is that right? So then do you disagree with the idea of "putting an animal out of its misery" as a moral position?

In addition to several other assorted mischaracteriziations I think you compared me to an "Ion". I don't know who that is, so I can't comment. I'm also not going to bother saying anything about you accusing me of moralizing.

Finally, may I suggest you put a sticker on your forehead that says "substantially missing"? I would like to see that kind of refreshing honesty once and awhile.

JJ, I don't mind if you decide to send more unsolicited praise to my private message box :cool:

Let's return to RandFan:

Originally Posted by Cain View Original:
As it so happens those "facts" -- if that's what we want to pretend to call them for a moment -- are highly questionable.

RandFan:
You see, all you have done is declared why I have only made claims and you haven't explained anything.

This is an interesting fabrication. I haven't explained anything? Or do you mean I haven't gone down the garden path of explaining what is irrelevant? Do you issue form replies? This always seem to be the same generic mess.

Some do, some don't. I grew up on a farm and my own anecdotal evidence suggests that the vast majority of our animals lived largely free of stress. The roamed freely, had plenty of food and water and were treated for any illness.

It sounds like an idyllic paradise. Even if I did trust your judgement -- which I don't -- a rather large portion of the animals we eat today are raised on factory farms. As far as my own anecdotal evidence goes, I stayed on a family farm briefly (friends of my father), long before my vegan days. I rather distinctly remember the children abusing the animals. When I expressed concern they said the animals really don't mind. Since I'm from the suburbs I had to rely on their expert judgement. Note to self: Why am I not surprised RandFan was raised on a farm?

Because laws, regulations and the interests of the farmer often work to the best interest of the animal. Not always and there are unquestionably some horror stories.

Would you say these regulations are adequately enforced?

Why not, that is pretty much all you have done. I see litte argument in your posts. They are simply filled with invective and superfluous nonsense. You state I'm wrong and make claims without explaining anything.

I see we've fallen on redundancy, and the standby non-argument argument in your bag of non-argument tricks. How should I respond to this? By reciting everything above and herein? Argument from marginal cases, rebuttal to the notes you cribbed from Professor Cohen, the incoherence of speciesism... shall I continue on?

Real simple answer. If they are capable of making moral judgments and comprehending moral duty then they should have rights. We should be granted rights because we are capable of making moral judgments and comprehending moral duty.

Using moral agency as the standard encounters all of the problems I cited in response to an earlier poster, I think his name was fowlsound. In any case it's right up there. It does indeed contain these things called arguments.

See, it really is quite simple.

And not only is it simple, it's wrong (see aforementioned post).

So you're saying that it's just a convention?
No more than any other philosophy?

This is an interesting kind of rhetorical remark. So if it was convention to torture animals, then that would be OK? And if it was convention to torture traditionally oppressed humans...?

What about the people who contend that this human empathy is misplaced.
What about them?

1.) Logical reasoning is not an absolute law which governs the universe (Logic and Fallacies).

2.) Logic is not a set of rules which govern human behavior. Humans may have logically conflicting goals (Logic and Fallacies).

3) No moral philosophy can resolve all moral conflicts.

This is without question your very best non-reply reply. It's almost virtuosic. I need not say that you're missing the point.

The purpose of that comment was that if morality is merely convention (with evolving standards), then you're not in much of a position to condemn the person who tortures cats in his basement. Your stance easily breaks down into a clumsy kind of moral relativism.

That no (known) moral philosophy has been able to resolve all moral conflicts is as meaningless as saying all living animals suffer.

It's an unthinking warm-fuzzy.
This is just rhetoric.

You see, when you balkanize my posts -- remove a sentence from context -- two things happen. 1) You miss the meaning. 2) My replies are exacerbated by your poorly structured non-responses.

Mental masturbation. Great for philosophical discussion but it won't resolve the issues of whether or not animals are moral agents or are entitled to rights.

What laws [the laws against animal cruelty)? Who are you suggesting that I provide this argument to?

The second sentence doesn't make a great deal of sense.

To the people (whoever and however many they might be) who decide that eating meat imposes unnecessary suffering I would say they have that right. I would say to those who live in a democracy that they have the right to seek to change the laws so that society will conform to their way of living. Should society change and prohibit the consumption of meat I would likely follow the law. I would argue that eating meat does not need to impose any significant suffering. Of course, what is significant and what is necessary is in the eye of the beholder. Some believe that the mere fact that humans exist causes needless suffering because of the impact of humans on our environment.

Well, thank you for that cogent answer (seriously).

Unfortunately you never really got to the meat of the matter. That is, how exactly the moral agency of some humans emanates rights to other humans (but not other animals). I thought mumblethrax had a devastating reply in this regard. I was thinking along the lines of his(?) clever response but could not for some reason articulate the absurdity. I now resent him for posting it first.

The philosopher that RandFan cited above, Carl Cohen, argues that all humans have rights because some humans have moral agency, and all humans are of the same kind. Leaving aside definitions here and assuming this is valid, can't I say then that some animals have moral agency, and therefore all animals have rights? We can use this method to identify any number of categories into which people fit, and then claim that all such things have rights.
 
As I've pointed out in umpteen previous threads there's a prima facie case against how the market would treat animals for one rather simple reason:
"Pointed out" does not mean "proven". You have suggested, insinuated, and attempted to not-quite-claim such things, but you haven't really produced a solid claim, let alone evidence.

Once again, go read about "stressed meat". That knowledge in and of itself utterly dismisses, completley and without possible recourse, your market argument.
Here you seem to be implying that since anything that lives suffers, this particular suffering (regardless of scale, apparently), is not relevant...? Is that right?

And, a pathetic, and in your case udoubtedly intentionally dishonest, exercise of the excluded middle.

You haven't changed a bit, you're still an arrogant, totalitarian git who can't stand being controverted.
 

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