Maninthemachine
Active Member
Or misleadingI know, right?
Or misleadingI know, right?
I think it's great we live in a country that lets you live as you wish.
What a ignorant statement.... the best part of being reasonable beings isn’t our ability to find reasons to do whatever we may want ? Wow...that’s scary how ignorant that is.you all have no regard for life beyond your own selfish needs. I’m out as well. Don’t need to waste my energy here .Nooo!!! We're just about to make progress on these 500-year-old arguments! Here, now, on FC! Don't go!
(Admittedly, they probably are better moved to @TiSteamo's vegetarian thread.)
Precisely what American patriot and vegetarian Benjamin Franklin said when he reintroduced fish into his diet late in life. Next, he said that the best part of being reasonable beings is our ability to find reasons to do whatever we may want.
I doubt those mothers are saying animals are as valueable as their kids. I can try to reason and understand the vegan movement and surely there are many parts I could get on board with, however when you start comparing an animal to 1 of my 4 kids...you lose me instantly. You can deflect all you want by comparing this and that, but @His_Highness said it well enough. I suspect you would choose the cow over my kid. This ruins so much of your credibility as a person with experience and knowledge that matters. Feel free fo deflect further...I will go back in to watch mode only now...I just wanted to know rather than assume.No I don’t have kids..there are thousands of vegans that do and many became vegan when they saw the true nature of the dairy industry and connected with the violence and pain of having your child drug away from you forever and them being mothers themselves (humans ). Certainly not deflecting.
I'm not sure you're getting the nuances of the discussion as there have been a couple of times you disagreed with one who was agreeing with you. Is English your primary language? I don't think @Accept was making the claim 'ol Ben was Right, but that he was right. People can, and do, justify most anything they choose. That does not mean the justifications are correct.What a ignorant statement.... the best part of being reasonable beings isn’t our ability to find reasons to do whatever we may want ? Wow...that’s scary how ignorant that is.you all have no regard for life beyond your own selfish needs. I’m out as well. Don’t need to waste my energy here .
Peace and love ,
Precisely what American patriot and vegetarian Benjamin Franklin said when he reintroduced fish into his diet late in life. Next, he said that the best part of being reasonable beings is our ability to find reasons to do whatever we may want.
I don't think @Accept was making the claim 'ol Ben was Right, but that he was right.
Its not my slogan, but can you defend it? Call me dull? How does that help? What does that say of you? I even went as far to say I could understand and get onboard with parts of the vegan movement and then you try and lop me in with a bunch of politicians you don't like and shun me from the discussion basically. How are vegans ever going to accomplish further understanding of their moevment if this is how they act?This until the reasonable being meets a much more reasonable being who shows him that he is wrong.
At that point, the reasonable being has two options: to increase his own reasonableness, or to continue to believe that he is reasonable even if he is not.
I think it's called "double-talk".
@nosmoking Putting words in our mouths we never said is typical of political opportunists.
Create an enemy even when it's not there.
No one said that we prefer a cow to a child, but if it has become your slogan to show that you are right, well, keep your dullness.
Do not animals eat other animals?
I went through this back when I was just a baby hippie...I went vegetarian, for a while, had as much millet and lentils as I could stand, tofu, bean sprouts....
It was sold as a superior moral position...a strange thing, if you consider that the basis of that position is the idea that we are not “morally superior” to animals and therefore have no right...that bothered me, the idea that our lack of moral superiority should impel us to make choices from a position of moral superiority.
The problem is, the “don’t eat animals” position isn’t actually a superior position - or a moral one: it’s hypocritical. A kind of hypocrisy only available to those who have never tried to support themselves with their own grown produce. Vegetable-eating animals will strip that garden down to the dirt before you ever get a single bite - and will not feel a twinge of conscience at your starvation, not consider your mate, your children, or anything else. They will do it again and again and again - as long as you keep planting gardens, should you survive from one growing season to the next. Rabbits, possums, deer, birds - just to name a few.
They do not care if you starve. They do not care if they are the agents of your starvation. They don’t give a rat’s ass about your moral position, you cannot make them honor the ‘agreement’ you imagine you make with them, to “live and let live”. Your moral posturing means nothing to the food chain. The food chain exists, no matter how you feel about it, no matter what you think about it. You are a part of it, have been since before you were born, and will be until the day you die - and beyond.
Take your sentiments to their logical conclusion, and you will find that you, and all humans - have NO right to exist, because your existence will require YOU - or someone else, on your behalf - to make choices that corrupt your moral superiority.
The animals are untroubled by your conundrums; they will eat what ever they can, and they will stay alive, or they will not eat enough and they will die. Just like you.
Life and death aren’t personal. They’re built in, no amount of finagling will undo it. *CRUELTY* otoh is *not* built in, and we humans do seem to have the market cornered there. Cruelty is as much a product of morally superior choices as is anything. Eating when others are prevented from eating, by whatever moral equation, is more or less cruel, depending on how much personal satisfaction you get out of the arrangement. Could we make our food supply less cruel? Absolutely, and I stand in favor of doing so, but PETA will not show us the way, they KILL the animals surrendered to them - an honorable, cruelty-free, *ethical* killing? Well, that’s one of those conundrums, and deciding not to make choices like that will kill you and everyone you can convince to go along.
Vegans will not show us the way, their morality is a pose, only possible when not honestly evaluated. The food chain will have you, either way. No amount of pretense will change the fact a single millimeter in any direction.
Animal-Free pie in the sky will feed no-one but the animals. If you’re ashamed to be alive if anything dies, then it’s a miserable life you have ahead of you. Die, then, and be glad your suffering is over, and be glad no four-foot has suffered for you. And pay no attention to the two-foots who mourn your passing, they are, for you, immoral fools.
Put THAT in your intellectual honesty and smoke it....
—-
I apologize to all those who find my remarks senselessly cruel and morally reprehensible....
Could we make our food supply less cruel? Absolutely, and I stand in favor of doing so
I went through this back when I was just a baby hippie...I went vegetarian, for a while, had as much millet and lentils as I could stand, tofu, bean sprouts....
It was sold as a superior moral position...a strange thing, if you consider that the basis of that position is the idea that we are not “morally superior” to animals and therefore have no right...that bothered me, the idea that our lack of moral superiority should impel us to make choices from a position of moral superiority.
The problem is, the “don’t eat animals” position isn’t actually a superior position - or a moral one: it’s hypocritical. A kind of hypocrisy only available to those who have never tried to support themselves with their own grown produce. Vegetable-eating animals will strip that garden down to the dirt before you ever get a single bite - and will not feel a twinge of conscience at your starvation, not consider your mate, your children, or anything else. They will do it again and again and again - as long as you keep planting gardens, should you survive from one growing season to the next. Rabbits, possums, deer, birds - just to name a few.
They do not care if you starve. They do not care if they are the agents of your starvation. They don’t give a rat’s ass about your moral position, you cannot make them honor the ‘agreement’ you imagine you make with them, to “live and let live”. Your moral posturing means nothing to the food chain. The food chain exists, no matter how you feel about it, no matter what you think about it. You are a part of it, have been since before you were born, and will be until the day you die - and beyond.
Take your sentiments to their logical conclusion, and you will find that you, and all humans - have NO right to exist, because your existence will require YOU - or someone else, on your behalf - to make choices that corrupt your moral superiority.
The animals are untroubled by your conundrums; they will eat what ever they can, and they will stay alive, or they will not eat enough and they will die. Just like you.
Life and death aren’t personal. They’re built in, no amount of finagling will undo it. *CRUELTY* otoh is *not* built in, and we humans do seem to have the market cornered there. Cruelty is as much a product of morally superior choices as is anything. Eating when others are prevented from eating, by whatever moral equation, is more or less cruel, depending on how much personal satisfaction you get out of the arrangement. Could we make our food supply less cruel? Absolutely, and I stand in favor of doing so, but PETA will not show us the way, they KILL the animals surrendered to them - an honorable, cruelty-free, *ethical* killing? Well, that’s one of those conundrums, and deciding not to make choices like that will kill you and everyone you can convince to go along.
Vegans will not show us the way, their morality is a pose, only possible when not honestly evaluated. The food chain will have you, either way. No amount of pretense will change the fact a single millimeter in any direction.
Animal-Free pie in the sky will feed no-one but the animals. If you’re ashamed to be alive if anything dies, then it’s a miserable life you have ahead of you. Die, then, and be glad your suffering is over, and be glad no four-foot has suffered for you. And pay no attention to the two-foots who mourn your passing, they are, for you, immoral fools.
Put THAT in your intellectual honesty and smoke it....
—-
I apologize to all those who find my remarks senselessly cruel and morally reprehensible....