kookbreaker
Evil Fokker
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2001
- Messages
- 15,926
PETA: Where only women are treated like meat.
kookbreaker said:PETA: Where only women are treated like meat.
One indication of the acceptability of a cause is when its opponents try to blunt its appeal by saying that, "of course", they agree with some of the claims made by those whose further claims they wish to reject. In the spirit of Gladstone's chancellor, the 19th-century Sir William Harcourt's remark that "We are all socialists now", today everyone, from scientists who experiment on animals, to foxhunters like Roger Scruton, is an animal welfarist. Scruton even says, in his little book Animal Rights and Wrongs, that "a true morality of animal welfare" ought to begin from the premise that the way we now treat animals on factory farms is wrong. In America, Matthew Scully, a conservative Christian, a past literary editor of National Review and now speech writer to President Bush, has amazed his fellow conservatives by publishing Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals and the Call to Mercy, an eloquent polemic against abuse of animals, culminating with a devastating description of factory farming. It has won praise from such icons of the American right as Pat Buchanan and Charles Colson. And, in November, the voters of Florida, not known as the most progressive of US states, gave the American animal movement its first ever victory in a referendum on factory farming when they voted to ban stalls that prevent sows from turning around.
Originally posted by Cain:
As for this whole Holocaust analogy, I see nothing wrong, in principle. Maybe I posted to that thread from five months ago, can't remember.
A fair comparison, but perhaps a political miscalculation. Few people even today can completely ignore the abuse and atrocities carried out against animals (though the farms where animals are treated as biological machines remain far removed from the public eye). The same argument cannot be made over the Internet since it violates Godwin's Law.
Pre slaughter stress - Stress of animals in the 2-3 day period prior to slaughter depletes reserves of muscle energy (glycogen) leading to high meat ultimate pH values (³ 5.70) resulting in dark, tough meat which is often dry. Rest and access to water prior to slaughter is required to replete these glycogen reserves in stressed animals. If a long recovery period is required, feed will also be needed. The factors associated with pre slaughter stress are:
Temperament - Can be avoided by selecting breeding stock on good temperament and educating/training of weaner cattle.
Rough or excessive handling - Avoid any situation resulting in rough handling on the property prior to consignment, in transit, or at the meatworks which can stress animals. Avoid the use of dogs on cattle not familiar with dogs.
Mixing of cattle - Avoid mixing cattle of different classes, sex or unfamiliar cattle during the turnoff/consignment process.
Climate - If possible, avoid turnoff/consignment of cattle during climatic extremes (heat waves, cold spells) or during rapid extreme changes in climatic conditions.
Holding time at meatworks - Avoid holding cattle at meatworks longer than necessary unless a rest period is required following extended transport periods.
Shane Costello said:I'm sure that any Jewish people reading will be delighted with the comparison between the holocaust and the slaughter of poultry.
I cannot emphasise enough the central role animal welfare plays in the meat industry. Abused and unhealthy livestock don't put on weight and rack up vet bills. At slaughter it is imperative that the animals are kept calm.
www.iowabeefcenter.org/pdfs/bch/04350.pdf
For narrow economic goals, stress must be kept at a minimum.
www.dpi.qld.gov.au/beef/3479.html
Notions of "abuse" and "atrocities" carried out against livestock are a vegetarian myth. Animal welfare laws mean that anyone who treats livestock the way the third reich treated Untermenschen would be fined and probably jailed.
Oh, and Hitler was a vegetarian.[/B]
Originally posted by cain:
*shrug* Hitler killed homosexuals, communists, Gypsies and other "degenerates" (11-12 million in all). I'm not sure why "Jewish people" are allowed a priveleged monopoly on pain and outrage for crimes against humanity. Either way, it's misguided.
Even conceding these (uninformed) points, which I'm disinclined to do, they completely miss the argument made by animal rights proponents. Identical economic incentives were invoked by slave owners:
"We wouldn't want to over-crowd boats and spread disease because slaves are expensive."
"We wouldn't want to mistreat or abuse our slaves because then they won't be as productive."
Not that it's of critical importance, but those raising animals have strong incentives to inject hormones, mistreat, and even abuse their animals. People in the United States, for example, prefer white breast meat on turkeys come Thanksgiving time. All hopped up on hormones, some become so fat they can't even walk on their own two drumsticks. Chickens on factory farms are consigned to the tiniest cages and live in their own filth. Horrible conditions in these industries have consistently been exposed since the days of Upton Sinclair.
Purposeless violence against animals has been condemned by society.
Society has progressed dramatically over the last 100 years that everyone accepts welfare laws against needless abuse and mistreatment. That is to say, animals possess limited rights that even their owners cannot wantonly violate.
Unfortunately, most people hold the same view toward the consumption of animals-- as though eating animals is comparable to scientific research. It's not. Many people the world over have adopted healthy vegetarian/vegan diets so that eating animals to satisfy our appetites has become as unnecessary as abusing them to satisfy sadistic impulses.
Of course, most people (including even myself) do not totally object to scientific experimentatio, since it serves a useful purpose, but even then there are strict laws and codes regulating conduct.
Shane Costello said:The only animals that have rights are those in the possesion of humans. Animals in the wild enjoy no rights or the protection of welfare laws. Livestock have more rights than wild animals.
Supercharts said:Exhibit comparing Holocaust, animals decried.
My very left-wing local newspaper buried this in back of the news today but last night it was all over the local TV stations.
PETA put an exhibit near the Holocaust memorial in downtown Boston. It compared the killing of chickens and turkeys to the Nazi Holocaust.
...
Originally posted by BillyTK:
<rant>But animals in captivity only have such rights to protect them from abuse by their human owners and some animals in the wild are granted certain protections from human harm. But simply granting these protections to animals in no way guarantees their protection--because compliance depends on the threat of force--and this in no way ameloriates the fact that these animals are bred solely to be exploited.</rant>
I just find the argument that animals in captivity are some how better off than their counterparts in the wild, and that this somehow justifies their captivity a little specious but mostly bloody infuriating.
Hi Billy,BillyTK said:<rant>But animals in captivity only have such rights to protect them from abuse by their human owners and some animals in the wild are granted certain protections from human harm. But simply granting these protections to animals in no way guarantees their protection--because compliance depends on the threat of force--and this in no way ameloriates the fact that these animals are bred solely to be exploited.</rant>
Btw, I'm not a member of the Animal Liberation Front, and I do believe some animal experimentation is necessary, if not desireable. I'm not attacking you personally for holding that view Shane, and I apologise in advance for any ill-feeling that the above causes; I just find the argument that animals in captivity are some how better off than their counterparts in the wild, and that this somehow justifies their captivity a little specious but mostly bloody infuriating.
I think that since humans are capable of empathy most of us find it disturbing that a thinking human could cause the suffering of another living thing. I also think that it is quite reasonable to expect humans to mitigate the suffering of animals that are in the care of humans.There is no rational reason or demonstrative evidence that if we conceded to the wishes of PETA that we would eliminate animal suffering or decrease it in any significant way. Statistically almost all animals in the wild are killed and eaten by predators or die from the elements.
Nearly all animals [in the wild] are killed and eaten shortly after they are born. Domesticated animals statistically live longer and better lives. That is a fact.
The only real "bad" is that humans have the nerve to domesticate and use animals. So we as a society enforce laws to mitigate animal suffering and your response is "less bad doesn't make it good". My answer, no one is trying to turn bad into good. We are just trying to balance the desires of many in society to reduce animal suffering with the desire of others to use animals for food, clothing, research and in some cases exploitation.
You can choose to equate animals with human bondage and human suffering but it doesn't wash. There will always be animals in the wild that cruelly exploit other animals for there own selfish desires. You have no plans to end this because it makes no sense. Nature requires a food chain. Coyotes must eat baby rabbits and Papa lions must snack on their cubs. Mamas kill babies, mamas kill papas and every animal does what ever it can to survive.
I cannot justify the actions of humans because of what animals do in the wild. I can note however that domesticated animals statistically have much longer life spans, less disease and rarely have to worry about predators.
If you are truly worried about the suffering of animals then you should see what you can do to protect baby ducks born in the wild. Most are eaten by wicked, evil predators.
BillyTK said:I just find the argument that animals in captivity are some how better off than their counterparts in the wild, and that this somehow justifies their captivity a little specious but mostly bloody infuriating.
Kodiak said:
Is a short, sedate, care-free life better than no life at all? Is decapitation or electrocution better than being torn to shreds by wolves or starving/freezing to death?
Sure... ( selected parts anyway.. )Dancing David said:
Just for laughs people, Would you eat a dog?
Peace
What about the deaths of rodents under the blades of agricultural combines?Few people even today can completely ignore the abuse and atrocities carried out against animals (though the farms where animals are treated as biological machines remain far removed from the public eye).
Chickens on factory farms are consigned to the tiniest cages and live in their own filth.
So do people on death row. But that's a spurious equivalency. The red haze has gone from my eyes and I might be able to make my point a little clearer. The treatment of animals by humans doesn't justify their fate, because their fate is solely the result of human's desire for their meat, not any desire for their wellbeing. It's certainly preferable to treat animals as humanely (deliberate pun) as possible but this doesn't justify their deaths. Any attempt to dress it our desire for their flesh as anything else is equivalent to the fluffy-headed thinking of some of the animal rights crowd.Shane Costello said:Yes, but what protections do animals in the wild get from harm doen by other animals? Zip. OTOH animals in human captivity get regular meals, secure accomodation and a peaceful death. Whether they are bred to be exploited or not is beside the point. They have it a lot better than animals in the wild.
The use of "animals" and "jungle law" is a matter of semantics resulting from 19th century ideas of the natural world as the opposition of human civilisation. Consider this; how many characteristics of people termed "animals" do you actually see in the wild? How does the idea of "jungle law" match with the conditions of the natural world?Are you denying that it is anything other than fact? Consider this; why are violent an loathsome human beings regularly referred to as "animals"? How come any inherently unfair and heartless state of affairs in the human world is said to be akin to "jungle law"? The natural world is a cruel, heartless place. If you don't believe me then visit a chicken coop after a visit from a fox (more hens are killed than could possibly be eaten by the fox) or walk through some woodland in winter, counting the carcasses of dead and frozen animals as you go.
Thanks!RandFan said:RandFan here,
My son signed on for me. I have been a good boy and have gotten allot of work done so one or two posts won't hurt. This is one of those subjects I just can't pass up.
Hi Billy,
I appreciate the tone of your post. I often get into arguments on the forum that I eventually regret. I truly respect other people's opinion. I think I would have less argument if I would take the same tack that you have in your post.
There is a moral argument against domesticating animals but I'm not confident enough to make it. As I explained to Shane in my subsequent post, I'm not objecting to the consumption of animals by humans (I'm a vegetarian, but I'm quite ambivalent about the whole thing), it's the argument that, because animals in captivity get better treatment than their wilderness counterparts, that this somehow justifies their fates.Your post presupposes that there is something inherently wrong with breeding animals for the purpose of exploitation. I see nothing wrong with breeding animals for the purpose of exploitation.
But if they're in captivity, how much better off are they? Horses and cows do get a bit of a free ride and should be made to pay taxes or somesuchI don't think the fact that animals in captivity are somehow how better of does justify an animals captivity but I do believe that it puts it into perspective.
I can't and won't speak for the animal rights lot; whenever I can exercise a choice which doesn't involve animal suffering, I exercise that choice, but in a straight contest between my survival and an animal's survival, I'm sorry but the fluffy bunny gets it. Conditions in the wild are cruel--to us, imposing our values on it as we watch the cute baby get munched by the big bad carnivore on the Discovery Channel, but carefully forget that without that big bad carnivore the cute baby and pals would over-run their habitat with the environmental problems that would cause--but let's stop trying to dress up our treatment of animals as somehow more compassionate.I don't understand why animal rights activists are upset that animals are domesticated or that they are killed for human consumption. From an earlier thread on the subject. I was responding to some specific points so it is not quite relevant to your post. However I think it is a good response.
I think that since humans are capable of empathy most of us find it disturbing that a thinking human could cause the suffering of another living thing. I also think that it is quite reasonable to expect humans to mitigate the suffering of animals that are in the care of humans.
But I find it logically inconsistent to decry the slaughter of domesticated animals for human consumption and not think twice of predation in the wild.
As I said earlier, if we could magically end all human involvement in the lives of animals tomorrow we would not reduce the suffering of animals. While this does not provide justifiation for the use of animals by man but it does give it some perspective.
throats slit and blood after being rendered brain dead by electrocution
voidx said:This is the process of killing the animals and then processing their meat. Billy, in your experience, did you electrocute and beat the turkeys as they were being grown? Some people don't have the stomach for the killing of an animal, in any fashion, and that's fine, but its a good thing for us that some people do, or else there'd be a lot less food available to us.