As I've pointed out to you seemingly hundreds of times, we cannot afford to let chickens and cows live unless we exploit them; for them it's either live and be exploited or never live at all. Is it better to live and be exploited than to never live at all? — VagabondSpectre
Not in the least. The kind of forage that many free-range cattle live off is ground that no crops can be grown upon. Field corn (which is what the U.S uses to feed its numerous amount of grain fed cows and chickens) is largely grown on land that is not high enough quality to grow vegan foods like sweet corn or other veg/fruit. — VagabondSpectre
Many farmers continue to raise livestock because it makes the most economic sense for them to do so, and some farms and ranches, by their very nature, can never be profitable without livestock. — VagabondSpectre
We can gradually shift away from livestock production, but we cannot increase our fruit and veg production at arbitrarily fast rates (in order to grow and store enough of our own produce to be nutritionally self-sufficient, we would need massive innovations in indoor growing and refrigerated infrastructure out the wazoo). — VagabondSpectre
Aside from being much more expensive, another problem with eliminating animal husbandry entirely is that planning vegan diets (especially a nutritionally adequate national supply) is more difficult than planning diets with some meat (because you need to consume a greater volume of vegan foods to gain the same levels of nutrition, meaning you need to plan what you eat more carefully to have well rounded nutrition). — VagabondSpectre
Animal free agriculture is actually much less efficient than some animal husbandry for a lot of farms, while being logistically more complex in almost every way. — VagabondSpectre
If super-healthy and tasty vegan diets weren't so damn expensive, more people would be vegan; — VagabondSpectre
For starters, where are you going to get all the fertilizer once we no longer breed cows? — VagabondSpectre
If it's gradual and by consumer demand (assuming that's your view) you should be prepared for food to become much more expensive than it is right now, for the reasons I've mentioned, and for many more reasons which we'll never get into. — VagabondSpectre
If the farm animal was bred and raised for slaughter, and if that's the only way it ever could have existed in the first place, then yes. — VagabondSpectre
On average vegans might be more healthy (especially as North America is over-weight on the whole) but I don't see evidence that vegan diets would benefit me. (I'm worried about losing weight, which is what I fear a vegan diet would cause). — VagabondSpectre
It's absolutely logical for an omnivore to eat meat than things like grass. — ssu
Of course not! If I live in a city, it's still quite good to know basic survival skills like which berries or mushrooms you can pick and eat from the forest. I really don't need the skills for survival as I can buy everything from the supermarket (and be rather confident that nothing there is poisonous to me). I really like to go with my children to the forest, pick up mushrooms and make great food. — ssu
And this brings us to the philosophically important question: why do you think that we basically aren't part of nature?
Because it seems like obviously what we do is unnatural (kill animals) for you, but what other animals do (kill other animals) is natural. — ssu
Likely an animal of prey is slaughtered far more violently and suffers more long when it is killed by a pack of wolves than how their domesticated relatives meet their death in the industrialized slaughter house. — ssu
And the reason for us to farm animals is quite logical: there is so many of us. — ssu
What is so wrong in accepting that we as humans are omnivores? — ssu
What is wrong in the idea that the human species, however advanced it has become and superior to other species, is still a species of and thus eats other fauna? — ssu
What is wrong in the fact that life exists because one type of animals eat others and not only fauna eating flora? — ssu
Why the idea that veganism is found to be so morally superior? — ssu
Niether cows, nor chickens nor dogs are similar to us in term of sentience. Other great apes, dolphins, elephants, and perhaps many others have high degrees of sentience and intelligence, but they are still not on the level of homo-sapiens. — VagabondSpectre
We can't even afford to let them die off naturally as if we're to go vegan we need all available resources to ensure the success of that endeavor. (setting them loose would be much more cruel than euthanasia) — VagabondSpectre
Striking fear into farm animals is counter-productive though, and is not the same moral question as whether or not we're ethically justified to slaughter them. — VagabondSpectre
I suspect that I need to eat meat to have optimum health (and not because I like the taste). — VagabondSpectre
The fact is that I already eat a lot, and if I stop eating meat I'm going to have to increase the volume even higher as non-meat alternatives are not as protein/fat dense. — VagabondSpectre
The reason why people send animals to slaughterhouses for their consumption is because it is beneficial to their survival and happiness. — VagabondSpectre
Not possible. By building dwellings we displace and destroy multitudes of critters and creatures. Our roads disrupt, our fires and excrement pollutes; we cause harm and it's just a matter of choosing who or what will pay the price for our existence. — VagabondSpectre
The more sentient (and perhaps by extension, intelligent) a thing is, the more I tend to extend moral consideration toward that thing. — VagabondSpectre
The farm animals we raise would need to be euthanized because we cannot afford to raise and care for them if they do not contribute to our own survival needs. — VagabondSpectre
No animal, human or otherwise, has the right to be free from fear. — VagabondSpectre
Yep. The world cannot go vegan (at least not yet). In other words, some people must eat meat to survive. — VagabondSpectre
Q: Do atheists have beliefs about the self and the universe which they follow with great devotion? — Marcus de Brun
Now if you come back on your own word, and now claim that god doesn't as a fact, the burden of proof is on you, not me. Now it may be the case that god's message isn't clear enough to you, but that doesn't mean god isn't clearing it up. God acts through people, so me attempting to explain how it works, if succesfull, is god clearing it up. — Tomseltje
You appear more concerned with some type of victory, not in some type of truth - I have no interest in continuing such a discussion — Rank Amateur
That gives god the grand total of 0.0004 milliseconds to spend checking out each star system... — Devans99
He is allowing the baby time to evolve itself so it can get beyond its terrible two's. The terrible two's of human AI is messing up the supercomputer of nature. When it reaches three, it will smooth out and the computer will work better for all. — wellwisher
Even when scientists explain their own works in completely concise and accurate manner, not a lot of people would understand, much less a general audience. — FLUX23
So let's hypothetically say God came to our world once again to clear up the confusion and misinterpretation. There are still going to be millions of people misinterpreting his words. — FLUX23
Depends. By "does not believe the person making the claim" do you mean the same as "believing the claim to be false"? If so, there is a burden of proof on that belief, as a new claim is made and each claim has a burden of proof on it. But if you mean the person questioning the claim has no belief either way regarding the claim, you're correct, there's no burden of proof on them. — BlueBanana
So yes, the Bible endorses slavery; we don't, and the Bible can't be used today to justify it. — Bitter Crank
Why can't the Bible be used to justify slavery? — chatterbears
Go right ahead and use the Bible to justify slavery, but tell us where in the Bible god commanded us to practice slavery. — Bitter Crank
The problem is that you can't take an atheist position and make claims about the nature of the deity. — Txastopher
My claim is, "I do not believe a God exists." AKA "I am not convinced that God exists." - If I told you I owned an invisible pet dragon, and you said you don't believe me, does the burden of proof suddenly rest with you? No. — chatterbears
Yes it does. It's simultaneously on both of you. Your claim offers no new information so we simply don't know whether you have an invisible pet dragon. Drawing conclusions from the existence of burden of proof or from that someone, despite the burden of proof being on them, doesn't provide any proof, is argumentum ad ignorantiam. — BlueBanana
Ah, so now you're claiming that whatever god had to say, it may or may not be correct. So this god that you claim not to believe in has, nevertheless, certain qualities that you are sure about. What a mess! — Txastopher
Obviously, you exclude yourself from this group since, as you state above, you wouldn't necessarily follow his commands, which suggests that you are either even more all-knowing, all-powerful, all-wise and all-loving than god; a logical impossibility, or that you have grandiose delusions, or that you are a bell-end. — Txastopher
Than Pascal's wager becomes bet on God is and act accordingly with 100 % chance of eternal bliss - or bet of God is not - with 100% chance of eternal suffering - — Rank Amateur
Never mind - whatever you say — Rank Amateur
seems you need to clarify if you are an atheist as below, or an agnostic as above — Rank Amateur
If it made sense from a health perspective, I would be a vegan, but the dietary volume and expense that is required to satisfy my personal nutritional needs is beyond my ability to manage — VagabondSpectre
And if we all had the where-with-all to plan vegan diets and the time and money to pursue them, we would still have to face the increased cost as a society, which would be a detriment to the poorest classes and nations. — VagabondSpectre
Nonsense, you are assuming about things you can't know. You don't know wether I eat meat, nor where I would get it from if I did. — Tomseltje
Fishing for an oppertunity to claim the moral highground again? A very see through and disingenious tactic mr chatterbears. You obviously have great troubles separating a philosophical discussion from a personal attack. Asking irrelevant personal questions while refusing to answer general questions that are directly related to the topic. — Tomseltje
You still haven't given an answer on what you mean when you say 'animals', so I'm still not sure what the topic is about, other than a shallow rant against the horrors in todays bioindustries. Now if that's all you wanted, you had better formulated the starting question as "is it wrong to commercially breed animals for consumption the way it is done now?" rather than "Is it wrong to eat animals?" — Tomseltje
God already made the path of health, clear in terms of the natural world. He was not addressing the artificial world of medical prosthesis and revisionist history. — wellwisher
Seems we are in violent agreement. Well except for that "quite the opposite part" — Rank Amateur
Wow! You really are dogmatic. So if God did put in an appearance, as per your request, you still wouldn't believe in him. — Txastopher
What makes you think that anything god could say would not be open to convenient interpretations and provide yet more material for confirmation biases? — Txastopher
If you were stating you are not convinced, you should have formulated it more like : "Does God come down and clear up any misunderstandings and/or misinterpretations of this texts? And if so, why haven't I seen any evidence of this." — Tomseltje
Every time people talk to each other with the result that they better understanding each other. — Tomseltje
If your claim is atheism - or there is no god. That claim in no way obligates the theist to show proof of God as argument against. If that is your claim the burden of proof for that claim rests with you. — Rank Amateur
Secondly, religion is an act of man, not an act of God, and as such is subject to all the inherent errors that entails. — Rank Amateur
lastly - the concept of a hidden God is well argued. The usual answer back is there is more value to us - the creature. What we consider valuable traits such as Faith, Charity, Chastity, Love of neighbor etc lose value if done on some guarantee of an eternal hereafter of bliss. It becomes a transaction , base. — Rank Amateur
When Jesus said, "render unto Caesar..." he wasn't condoning/endorsing Caesar, he was simply acknowledging a fact: the Romans were running things in Israel, like it or not. — Bitter Crank
So yes, the Bible endorses slavery; we don't, and the Bible can't be used today to justify it. — Bitter Crank
Part of the reason, God allows various ways of interpreting the bible is so the faithful can save some through their inner spirit of truth. — wellwisher
Do you still eat meat? If so, then saying something is immoral is irrelevant if you are going to continue contributing to the industry that you claim is immoral. Talk is cheap. — chatterbears
Whether or not I eat meat is irrelevant to the argument at hand, in point of fact — VagabondSpectre
Nonsense, in the animal utopia farm I could also choose to wait with killing and eating the animal till it reaches old age, and it starts suffering from worn out joints. By killing the animal then I prevent it suffering alot of pain from walking about with worn out joints. You are conflating current practices you've witnessed with the suggested idea. — Tomseltje
If God made Himself unequivocally known, Pascal's wager becomes a sure thing. — Rank Amateur
So what you're saying is that you want god to appear and clarify his wishes, but if he demands anything that you don't like, you won't do it. What do you need the clarification for? Either god is the ultimate moral authority or he isn't. If he is, you do what he says. If he isn't, his clarification is redundant. — Txastopher
What mattered to the New Testament writers is that Jesus was the risen Christ, and that the job of the church was to continue the ministry of the Apostles. Period. — Bitter Crank
Answer the question? — Tomseltje
Who is not a follower now? Well everyone who is not an idiot is, but is there any choice now? Does it have any value? Is it paradise or prison? Do your 80 years, get your ticket punched. Are you still a human being with any kind of free will? Does your acts of kindness even matter now, if there is no choice not to. — Rank Amateur
Maybe you are think of Paul: Slaves, obey your earthly masters with respect and fear, and with sincerity of heart, just as you would obey Christ. Ephesians 6:5 — Bitter Crank
In the end you'll end up with people like in the OP who don't see a way out of the predicament and endorse damn near everything. — Buxtebuddha
Why assume God doesn't? I see God doing so all the time, it's just that many people refuse to listen. — Tomseltje
Let's say God did appear and said that, "yes, homosexuals should be euthanised". Would this make you change your mind? — Txastopher
I've stated that factory farming standards are immoral in one my earliest posts in this thread... — VagabondSpectre
But just to clarify, if I ethically raise chickens and goats in my animal utopia where they are handled with compassion, would you object to me consuming them? Unless I consume or sell these animals (which have not been tortured at all or suffered unnecessarily) the whole operation will have to cease. Do you argue that I would be morally obligated to do so? — VagabondSpectre
1. Live a longer life in a protected habitat free from predators, which is large enough to live in comfortably, has food provided, where you are handled by compassionate keepers, live happily, but must one day be humanely slaughtered. — VagabondSpectre
What kind of clarification would you accept? — Txastopher
Look, if the Jesus couldn't adequately clarify things, (and Jesus was God)... well, there you have it. — Bitter Crank
I asked Him about this ages ago, and He explained it like this: "Life would be very dull if all the answers were given in advance, like a crossword puzzle that's already filled in." Thus saith the Lord. — unenlightened
Is it a better world if God came on the evening news - stopped the world spinning for an hour and cleared up all the confusions ?
Do we become a world of saints, or a world of sheep? — Rank Amateur
Some might argue he isnt real enough to do so. — SherlockH
It's not psychotic to realize that chickens and sheep and cows cannot survive indefinitely in the wild. Chickens will die off rather quickly, the sheep might not last a season un-sheared, and the cows will eventually be taken by coyotes, wolves, disease, and the elements. — VagabondSpectre
If I treated animals like I treated humans then your point would stand, but I cannot yet afford to — VagabondSpectre
when every child is vaccinated and has a well planned, supplement included plant-based diet, then we can afford to let our farm animals die of natural causes out of charity — VagabondSpectre
There are yet hard thermodynamic requirements for the earth's 7.6 billion humans, and it's not our fault that we have not yet freed ourselves from the food-chains of evolution. Animal husbandry is still too significant a part of even first world agricultural food production to do away with it over-night. — VagabondSpectre
You may have done research, but did you do the proper research that would allow you to get the adequate vitamins and levels you need to be healthy? Have you tried to become Vegan for a month or two and then initiated a blood test to check your levels to see if you have any deficiencies? Have you then corrected those deficiencies by eating more of what you need to correct them? Or possibly tried taking supplements?I've done research, I've tried various diets, and I've known plenty of successful and failed vegans. If you're going to just refer me to a dietician I'm not sure we can have a discussion. — VagabondSpectre
I know vegans who are less healthy than they were on an omnivorous diet. Are they just doing it wrong? — VagabondSpectre
We may consume too much meat, but converting all that pastureland into farmland (and then somehow fertilizing it without cow-shit) is actually likely more expensive than the vegan dieticians let on. — VagabondSpectre
We could shop around for articles about nutrition and the economics of agriculture I suppose. I'm game for this but are you sure the scientific community has concluded in in these matters? — VagabondSpectre
eating meat is a part of who I am. I'm a part of the food chain; it's why I have incisors. — VagabondSpectre
If I was under-nourished, meat would indeed be a luxury, one that would improve my health. — VagabondSpectre
I would be happy to offer sources if you expect them. — VagabondSpectre
Plant-based diets can yield long-term health benefits but only when they're very well planned, and there isn't enough kale for all of us — VagabondSpectre
Is natural suffering fine because it's natural? — VagabondSpectre
I would wager that it would be better to be born, live, and suffer, than to have never been born at all. — VagabondSpectre
All humans will eventually be killed by something, and we have the exquisite torture of knowing, so should we stop breeding? — VagabondSpectre
Why can't you find what I was referring to? Just go back to the comments and look at the quotes above them. It isn't difficult. Do you have some kind of disability which would make that unusually difficult? — Sapientia
I don't think I could maintain my health if I did not eat meat... — VagabondSpectre
We got where we are by exploiting animals (cooking and eating animal meat is likely what permitted some of the evolutionarily recent improvements to homo-sapien brains) and globally we're not quite ready to give them up. — VagabondSpectre
Anyone living an aboriginal way of life eats meat out of necessity; plants don't have the energy/protein density of meat and it's hard as fuck to survive as an indigenous vegan (they all died). There is no argument to be made against meat eating in a traditional way of life.... — VagabondSpectre
If these third world countries did not utilize animal husbandry they would almost certainly be unable to produce a bountiful and diverse enough vegetable diet to keep their already under-nourished populations healthy. — VagabondSpectre
Maybe I could, but it would be at great expense to me and if I'm honest I worry such a radical change to my diet could lead to a radical change in my health. — VagabondSpectre
I didn't actually choose to be a meat eater, I was born with canines, and asking me to change smacks of sacrifice. Unnecessary cruelty to animals is definitely something we need to mitigate in the first world but we just don't know enough about diet and nutrition to eliminate meat from all of our diets. Vegans are guinea pigs. — VagabondSpectre
Furthermore, abstaining from hunting and consuming animals, or raising them, either leads to animal suffering anyway, or animal genocide. Human hunting is a natural part of a balanced ecosystem, and while over-hunting is bad, under-hunting can be just as bad or worse in destroying bio-diversity. Without farms that pay for themselves we must euthanize all those species (cows, pigs, chickens) which can no longer take care of themselves in a natural environment. — VagabondSpectre
Killing the deer saves the mouse and gives purpose to the wolf. — VagabondSpectre
We would be foolish to think that we have effective decision making power when it comes to what's best for nature; — VagabondSpectre
What exact question [and be specific] is a rhetorical question? And if I already know the answer, is the answer that I know the same answer you know? If not, is the answer that has been presented to me, backed by facts and logic? — chatterbears
Do you deny that those questions of yours which I quoted only moments ago and can be easily found were rhetorical? If so, then why were you asking them? I don't see the need to genuinely ask those questions, unless you're so far gone that you can no longer even contemplate matters from a different perspective. — Sapientia
This is a public discussion and I am at liberty to comment on anything you say here. If you wanted a private one-on-one discussion, then you're doing it wrong. — Sapientia
But that doesn't address my comment. My comment was picking up on your faux questioning which is really just rhetorical. You're asking questions which you already know the answer to, which is superficial. You aren't seeking knowledge, you just don't like the answer. — Sapientia
Other people's actions have an impact on the world around us. You don't live in a vacuum, as your actions and beliefs will also affect the lives of other people. Eating animal products causes more harm to the environment (which also affects other people, not just you), rather than eating a plant-based diet. To suggest "Let others live how they feel they should live", is completely ignorant to the harm that can come from that type of mindset.Alternatively, just continue to eat what you feel you should be eating, and let others do the same. — Txastopher
The problem here is the meat eater's blatant disregard for the harm that animal products cause. Not just to the environment or the health of humans, but also the animals themselves. Would you call the activists in favor of the prohibition of slavery 200 years ago, an act of self-righteousness? Vegans are trying to minimize the harm and suffering, just as slavery opposition was trying to do the same. If you want to equate that to self-righteousness, that's your problem.The problem here is not the vegan diet, the problem is vegan self-righteousness. — Txastopher
At some point, a vegan on this thread claimed that veganism is the sole logical conclusion of ethical thinking on diet. Well, it's been shown in multiple ways that this is a false claim. — Txastopher
I'm going to duck out of this thread now. I don't think I have anything more to say on the subject. — Txastopher
To both of you, since you're so humored by how unreasonable Vegans are; how about you debate me, live on stream. You can show thousands of people how flawed and fallacious my argumentation is, since it is apparently equivalent to that of a Jehovah Witness. It should be easy for both of you, right? And we can let the audience be the judge. And if either of you respond with some excuse, such as "It would be a waste of time.", then you're full of hot air.
This thread is for people who actually care to discuss and explain their positions, not ignore all opposing positions without proper rebuttal. I'd love to talk to either of you, or both at once, over voice chat. That way, you can't constantly ignore questions and comments without proper responses, followed by ad hominem. And if you're not willing to debate me over voice chat, get off this thread and go spout your nonproductive comments elsewhere. — chatterbears
Lol, no thanks. I don't do voice chat. Here's good enough. — Sapientia