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This is one thing I really don't understand, how can you think someone should go to jail for beating a dog, but be happy to fund the slaughter of hundreds of animals over your life.
Wait…
Do your dogs not eat meat?
Mine don't.
Unlike cats who are obligate carnivores, dogs are "opportunistic carnivores". They are able to digest plants, and a high quality vegetarian dog food is actually significantly healthier for them than the " grain-free" diets that have become so popular in the last few years and have been linked to increased heart disease.
After looking into it, I seems this is highly disputed by most of veterinary science, but I’ll admit it’s not well studied and maybe you’re right. But we do know meat is okay for dogs. We do not know if a meatless diet isn’t harmful. I can’t imagine why lean animal protein would be bad for an animal bread from wolves.
And yes, cats absolutely need meat.
I completely understand your reasoning for opposing the meat industry, but I saw one argument that I'm curious what ethical vegans would think about:
What if there is an animal product that has already been harvested, is it unethical to then utilize it? Like, stealing meat(which would actually hurt the meat industry), or being at an event where there are meat dishes that would otherwise go to waste. Those forms of consumption aren't supporting the slaughter of the animals.
"Utilize" implies that animals are a resource for consumption instead of living things with their own right to live. As another comment pointed out we don't "utilize" humans after they have been murdered. A goal of veganism is to stop factory farming but it is not what veganism is. If you consider all animals as having a right to life you then wouldn't consider their bodies as resources after they were murdered but instead as victims.
Yes we do. Medical cadavers, organ donation, are the two most obvious ways.
I care about my own life, but not my lifeless body once I did.
Medical cadavers and organ donors are, first of all, volunteers not raised for that purpose, and second of all, we do not view them as commodities. There are rituals of respect when working with medical cadavers. I have heard of the families of organ donors visiting the recipients in emotional meetings.
Of course, but in the situation I gave. You aren't the one doing that.
Yeah if you guys wanna "utilize" my corpse have at it. Being useful after death seems like a win to me.
This is a nonsensical statement that contradicts itself. If all animals have a right to life, then you wouldn't see any issue with a lion murdering a gazelle and then feasting on the victim's body. Alternatively, if you condemn carnivorous animals as murderers, you don't consider carnivores to have a right to life.
Even if we consider this only applies to humans -- what about our pets? Cats are obligate carnivores. How can we feed our pet cats without being complicit in murder and feeding our cats the bodies?
Lions have to eat meat to survive, humans don't. Humans are also moral agents, animals are not.
I’m pretty sure there are vegan pet foods with similar nutritional profiles
Not for cats. There's a market for vegan cat food, but vets say it doesn't give them the full nutrition they need.
On top of that, I'm always skeptical of vegan foods that are able to meet more comprehensive nutritional profiles. Not their safety or anything, but if they're truly vegan. We can't just synthesize nutrients from chemicals, not en masse. Maybe in a few decades, but for now, those nutrients require incredibly expensive equipment to make from scratch.
Most of the time, the nutrient is extracted, purified, and concentrated from its usual source. Nutrients only found from meat would then need to be extracted from meat, which technically wouldn't be vegan. I think there's some nutrients that we're able to engineer bacteria to produce, which is certainly better from a vegan perspective. Although it begs the question of what vegan ethics around bioengineering bacteria are.
I have to get to work after this, this might be my last response today
I gave it a quick google, and while there aren't many actual studies, the few recent ones I saw seemed to indicate it works fine for cats. Here are three abstracts (click on this sentence to uncollapse them):
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0284132 (Sep. 2023)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9860667/ (Jan. 2023)
https://bmcvetres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12917-021-02754-8
Do you have a source that this is true for vegan food? Also, is this actually necessary to meet nutritional needs?
I'm not aware of any nutrients that bacteria, yeast, or other cell cultures cannot be engineered to produce, but I could be wrong
I'm not sure what the angle is here. Microbes are no more sentient than plants.
I'll have to look at those articles, thanks. It might be that they've more recently found formulations that work well as full substitutes. At the very least, it warrants long term study with vets regularly checking vitals and levels.
I don't know if the extraction is necessarily true for vegan foods, that's why I'm rather uncertain about their validity. It seems like bioreactors and bacteria might be the vegan way of making them, which is sensible. I'm just not sure that they'd actually use that for vegan pet food, but it's something for me to check later.
And I didn't mean to take a dig at you with that last line of mine about ethics, sorry about that. I'm not a vegan but I personally think it slippery to define what life is okay to consume and what life isn't. It continues to surprise me what we learn about plants. That said, a plant is a far cry from bacteria, so I see your point.
I appreciate the conversation!
do all living things have a right to live?
Why would they not?
all is the keyword in that sentence.
Exactly, why do all animals not have an inherent right to live?
I didn't say "animals"
There are social and intrapersonal reasons to avoid eating meat even if doing so doesn't lead directly to more animals being slaughtered. It is still treating the dead bodies of animals as a commodity, something we don't do to the bodies of dead humans. And it will take a cultural shift in how we see animals in order to end their oppression.
And the issue of eating "wasted" (weird way to talk about it as a vegan) meat is more concrete when you are eating meat at a function or the leftovers of a friend. The next function is going to have just as much meat if not more because it all got eaten. Your friend isn't going to think about reducing their meat consumption because they were left with too much, they might even get more satisfaction from you eating it because of pity. People who regularly consume animal products often think going without them must be suffering.
I don't agree with freegans, though I also don't really care what they do. As long as they understand there is a clear distinction between something like dumpster diving and a potluck.
By definition, Vegans would not. People who would typically define themselves as "Freegan".