Metsfanmax wrote:Well, I won't deny that the purpose of having ethical beliefs is that you would prefer other people to act in accordance with those beliefs. I think the world would be a better place if people ate less meat and less dairy. I do not know why you would directly attack me simply for having such a preference.
I didn't attack your ethical beliefs. I just don't believe your ethical beliefs are based purely on logic and not your personal preferences.
mets wrote:I argue that the farmer is going to the expense of purchasing seed, working the land, and tending the crops, just to waste it on an unnecessary process. The farmer could do more good for the world by selling those crops to be eaten directly, rather than eaten by livestock on factory farms.
The problem, Mets, is that the farmer isn't going to the expense for the hell of it. He has a goal. He wants to make a living. So he grows food and sells it. He can't give it away or he won't be able to pay his mortgage, take care of his family and all those other things.
If we eliminated the need for feed to animals, we wouldn't have all that extra food to be used to feed people, all that extra food wouldn't be grown because there is no incentive.
mets wrote:I am against putting corn-based products in our fuel. It is quite unfortunate.
That was a really,
really bad idea and people tried to tell everyone that it wasn't a good idea. But we went along with subsidizing and pushing that because we wanted to combat global warming and didn't consider the unintended consequences. Now food is diverted to ethanol instead of being sold to people to eat because the people producing the corn get a better price selling it for biofuel. Which simply raises the price for that food to be consumed for people.
mets wrote:And, I agree that the issue is hardly as simple as "stop feeding the animals, and the poor people get the food." We would still need to figure out just how to make that transfer work, in an efficient manner. But I don't doubt that the transfer can occur, at least in principle. People gotta eat, as you say.
Food spoils. Transportation costs are high. Storage is costly. The best way is to make sure enough food is grown or produced locally. And again, there is incentive. The feeding of people is the by product, the reason people produce the food for sale is to make a profit so that they can afford just regular old stuff, like a house, education. It's a whole economic system that has to be considered. Charity if fine and dandy, but that charity has a cost. And someone has to pay that cost.
mets wrote:I am against animal testing in science, except in cases where it can be proven conclusively that this testing would be of specific benefit to a much greater number in another species. This is difficult to do, but I think there are some cases where it can be justified.
I'm kind of against animal testing for cosmetics. Animal testing for science, meh, whatever the scientists think they need. But no matter how much testing is done on animals, the product still has to be tested on people eventually. Probably best to figure out if it will kill us right from the get go by testing on animals at first, but there is only so much that can be determined from animal testing. The real tests always come from human trials. As I'm sure you are aware.
mets wrote:I don't ignore them, so much as to say that we need to agree on the broad strokes before we can get into the details. We would have more food if we stopped eating meat, all other things being equal.
See, this is where you start to get into trouble, IMO. All other things
aren't equal. Never have been, never will be. If we don't need feed grains for livestock, then far less feed grains will be produced. It really comes down to money. Take yourself for instance, imagine you are poor and have no money. You want someone to feed you, but would you expect that someone should go to the expense to feed you and you offer absolutely nothing in return? For my part if I had no money, I'd at least offer some service of benefit to the person who went to the expense of feeding me.
One meal, no big deal. Feeding me for days, weeks, months, years, would it be fair for me to expect that and offer nothing in return? I should pay, if not with money then with something else of value, like my time and talents.
And that is how it is, the brutal truth of the world, nothing is free nor should it be. The people who produce the food deserve compensation. Without that compensation the people lose the ability to produce the food, as well as the incentive.
That's why if you don't need the food to feed the livestock, then that food won't be extra, it simply will not exist as there is no point growing it.
mets wrote:I do my best to avoid products where animals were harmed, and I am careful not to purchase products that contain animal by-products. It is true that it is nearly impossible to avoid some instances of harm to non-human animals when you participate in the market (for example, animals are inevitably harmed whenever we have large-scale farming). My goal is to minimize the amount of harm that I inflict on others. Completely giving up on that goal because I can't zero it out, is not what I am about. We humans can't be perfect -- we just do the best we can with the information and resources we have available to us.
I don't blame you or hold that against you at all. You do what you can and harsh realities sometimes conflict with or ethical beliefs. That's life. It's nothing to lose sleep over, IMO.
mets wrote:I don't have a strong objection to people who consume animal flesh because it is their only method of survival. I do find it unfortunate that in a land with plentiful resources such as the United States, where everyone could easily consume a plant-based diet without ever going hungry, we consistently choose the more inefficient and harmful product. That's all there is to it.
That's fine, just so long as you don't go trying to force other people or even try to convince the State to force other people. You live your life as you wish to live it, let others live their lives as they wish. That leads to far less conflict in life when people stay out of each other's gardens.
Hell, a person could survive just fine eating raman noodles everyday of their lives and the expense would be tiny. but that ain't really living, is it? Just because you won't enjoy a tasty steak doesn't mean others shouldn't be able to (especially if they pay for it, any inefficiencies are certainly priced into the product).
But mets, there are certain economic realities that I don't think you consider or really understand. That's not me bashing you, that's just how I see it. I don't know shit about outer space and it doesn't bother me, but I do know a little bit about economics. We all have our areas of experience. That's why one must be careful trying to advocate "solutions" for problems that they don't know all there is to know about that problem. It leads to unintended and often dire consequences.