• Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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    9 days ago

    Ah, OK, I misunderstood you. I didn’t realise you’re a proponent of exterminating all the farm animals.

    Because, if they’re not used on farms, they have no way of surviving in the wild. Not to mention there either not being “enough wild” for all of them.

    • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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      9 days ago

      “The animals we bred to be genetic freaks are so deformed they will no longer survive in the wild so we should continue breeding the genetic freaks.” Amen brother.

        • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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          9 days ago

          I mean I’m not super opposed to non-factory farms but, just as 2 examples, chickens for meat grow so quickly that they can barely stand and their hearts literally can’t keep up and they end up extremely sick and often just dying of heart attacks. Egg laying chickens are bred to essentially be constantly ovulating, which can’t be great for their health or well-being, but this one’s harder to say.

          • Vegafjord demcon@lemmy.ml
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            9 days ago

            I agree with you about that it is horrific. No animal should suffer that. And I do see that the machine is incentivizing this through merciless efficiency.

            But just because it is incentivized doesn’t mean a farmer has to be ruled by the machine. They don’t have to be ruled by efficiency. They can choose to care for their animals instead of disregarding their gleedity.

            This necessarily means there will be much less meat, but the meat that is produced will come from animals that has had a good life, instead of being tortured throughout their life.

            • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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              8 days ago

              I’m just saying those are the breeds we have now, and we would basically have to selectively breed less productive animals, which I don’t see happening any time soon.

              • Vegafjord demcon@lemmy.ml
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                8 days ago

                As long as we bond with the machine, you are right, that will be a reality. But it is when we relearn to appreciate independence that we can move beyond the time of shame.

      • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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        9 days ago

        Yeah, if only I didn’t specify cutting down on consumption which would drive a “wind down” of breeding…

        But hey, good to know you’re so concerned about farm animal welfare that you want to kill them all.

        • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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          9 days ago

          The goal should be no breeding at all. I don’t have a perfect solution, but bringing millions more into factory farming while “tapering it down” causes as a whole far more suffering. I don’t see an animal dying of an infection and say “well killing is wrong so have fun writhing in agony until you die, adios!”

          • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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            8 days ago

            Which is why I’m talking about enforcing free-range farms where the animals can be happy.

            It’s not a perfect solution, but it’s an achievable solution. Suddenly ending all farm animals is not.

            • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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              8 days ago

              I mean I don’t think they would even disagree with that, they were just saying it is still exploitative to kill something or take eggs from something that does not want that to happen, as it would be for a human. Their contention was that while having small scale farms would be practically more moral, that doesn’t make it moral.

              • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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                7 days ago

                My point is that if vegans go all “eat meat == murderer” narrative, the actual winding down of the animal industry slows down. So it’s amoral to do that, because you’re extending the suffering of animals. We need the wind-down to happen ASAP, so we can kick the lobbies out, and start working on lab-grown equivalents. Which will be hard enough to introduce to the public, without the guilt-shaming added from the other side.

                • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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                  6 days ago

                  I mean yeah it’s not a good narrative, if someone eats less meat but I see them buying eggs ill go ehhhhh… and look the other way. But if someone asks me “am I morally right to buy eggs?” I’ll usually say something like “well it’s still not great but it’s much better than eating meat.” They were only speaking to the veracity of your statement, I think any non-insane vegan would agree that “switch to small, humane farms” is better messaging and far closer to being moral.

                  • Alaknár@sopuli.xyz
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                    6 days ago

                    There’s also going to be a whole 'nother can of worms opened when we finally figure out that plants also feel pain, which also makes eating them amoral.

                    Until we figure out fully artificial food sources, 100% lab grown matter, we will be causing some pain to the world, it’s inevitable, it’s how this world works.

      • Tiresia@slrpnk.net
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        8 days ago

        genetic freaks are so deformed

        holy ableism batman. If animals are people, then denying domesticated animals reproductive access because of their genetics is genocide.

        • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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          8 days ago

          um… if 2 humans wanted to bring a child into existance that would suffer its whole life and then die of a heart attack into the world I would also say that’s immoral. An animal having low social awareness or being mentally disabled is not the same as ovulating 3 times a day every day for their entire life, or having a heart attack by 6 months old.

          • Tiresia@slrpnk.net
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            7 days ago

            if 2 humans wanted to bring a child into existance that would suffer its whole life and then die of a heart attack into the world I would also say that’s immoral.

            So what would you want to do if they kept making such children? Imprison them? Forcefully sterilize them? Would you like the political system of your society to have the authority to decide what “suffering your entire life” is?

            • starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works
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              6 days ago

              I mean I might, same as I would if they took a homeless person and caused them to suffer their whole life, that’s legitimately evil behavior. We may not have an exact definition of “suffering your entire life,” but whatever factory farmed chickens are experiencing is certainly it. This is like saying “we can’t define exactly what constitutes abuse so what are you going to do, have society decide an arbitrary line?” Yes, and that is what we do.

              • Tiresia@slrpnk.net
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                6 days ago

                Congratulations, you support eugenics. Historically governments have forcefully sterilized all sorts of people because their children would suffer unacceptably by the government’s standards.

                Now please look into the history of eugenics and see what the policy you support has meant in practice.

                Much like historical eugenics supporters, you are ignoring the outside factors that are causing someone’s suffering in your judgment, blaming a factory farmed chicken’s suffering on them being a “genetic freak” rather than on the people that lock them in cages shoulder to shoulder.

                The descendents of chickens will produce so many eggs that they will start rotting near the nest and become a health threat, so they need assistance with getting enough protein and with removing the eggs before they rot. This is not a life of suffering, they only need a tiny bit of assistance to live as full life as any bird.

                Chickens choose to make their nests in coops if they are built for them. Fences around a chicken yard are usually there to stop predators from murdering them and most chickens will not fly over them even if they can, as long as the fenced off area is large enough.

                The same goes for dairy cows, who need assistance getting the milk out because they produce more milk than their calfs can drink. A farmer with a bucket may be approached by cows that want to relieve the pressure.

                Some vegans consider honey to be provided with consent if the beekeeper is gentle enough. By the same standard, chicken eggs gotten when helping them clean their nest and milk gotten from cows whose udders would otherwise break would be vegan.

                Of course without killing the males, a farmer probably can’t saunter up to a cow and help them get the milk out quite as easily, but that’s a skill issue.