by TheTurtle » Sat 11 Feb 2006, 09:11:30
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Any society predicated on the exploitation - or murder - of another species, just because those species are vulnerable either through being less 'intelligent' or unable to defend themselves adequately - hardwires such injustices into every fibre of its being. Filtering through the system, the implicit value of 'the strong must always triumph over the weak' stamps itself on everything we aspire to do - and we end up with all forms of social injustice; from intolerance and racism, through to violence and war.
Think what the poor stalks of corn must feel as sharp blades slash through their tender bodies each fall.
Or do you only respect the life of mammalian species?
Is a tiger racist or intolerant, since every meal it eats comes from the death of another animal?
The fact is, all animals live at the expense of the lives of other beings. Plants make do with sunshine. But herbivores eat those plants and humans eat those herbivores. I am always aware of the life I consume which gives me life. I am grateful and I know that some day my body will feed other living things (not to mention the microscopic little critters who are already enjoying turtle soup).
Certainly none of us is arguing that the commercial processing of animals isn't disgusting. It is just one more symptom in a sick culture.
But to assume some sort of moral superiority because you choose not to eat meat is misguided. Consider Hinduism, which generally advocates a vegetarian approach. It also led to a bitterly repressive caste system.

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Meat eaters, examine the justifications for your habits - and why you're able to practise them - then honestly ask yourself the following questions:
1. Meat is good and sustaining - and choc full of B12 - why don't we eat other humans when they're dead?
2. Why shouldn't we euthanase the sick, infirm, or intellectually impaired?
3. What's wrong with paedophilia?
4. Why don't we take schoolkids on educational trips to the slaughterhouse/abbatoir? Are we secretly ashamed of something?
1. Because there are better sources of meat available. But when there aren't, many humans apparently do turn to cannibalism (The Donner Party, WWII Stalingrad, those rugby players whose plane crashed in the Andes, etc.) In survival situations, I prefer insects, reptiles and small rodents myself.
2. That would make a fine ethics debate in another thread.
3. Are you accusing meat eaters of being pedophiles? If so, I am highly offended. You might consider reading the Code of Conduct.
4. Yes. We should be ashamed. On the other hand, when I was 10, I helped my great aunt catch and kill two chickens for our dinner. There was no shame in that because it was done cleanly and humanely and with gratitude for the gift we received. The slaughterhouses have insulated most of us from what is a natural part of life ... the taking of another life so that we may live (whether it be animal or plant life).