this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2023
505 points (87.2% liked)
Asklemmy
43995 readers
1265 users here now
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy ๐
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- [email protected]: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_[email protected]~
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Vegans oppose animal cruelty.
Vegetarians don't, as the production of eggs, milk, etc is cruel.
Looks left at 90% of the human population causing untold suffering without giving 2 shits.
Looks right at the 5% that are actually bothering to do something.
"Yes, let's shit on them"
Man I had to rephrase this a dozen times and I still don't have a good way to communicate what I'm trying to say.
The goal of this kind of callout is to make vegetarians, people who already value animal welfare, aware that they may still be contributing towards animal cruelty. For example, I was a vegetarian for years and then got rocked by the realization that, "oh wait, vegans aren't just crazies that I can blow off, it was me who was ignorant the whole time."
So I anecdotally assume that a huge percentage of vegans are vegetarians who went from thinking "vegetarians and vegans are basically the same, besides vegans taking the idea too far" to "oh wait there's a huge important difference between the two." On vegan spaces, people often joke that "bullying worked on me lol" because the gentle approaches are easily ignored, but the really blunt "your actions don't align with your stated ethics" is really difficult to brush off.
I get you, but I also think there's value in considering how these kinds of conversations affect people who are neither vegetarian nor vegan.
If you create a permission structure for 10 meat eaters to write off the whole group as extremist crazies, while you're trying to bully 1 vegetarian, who might be, maybe, bullied into veganism, that's still a net loss of a whole lot of animals.
Also, this isn't a veg friendly space. Having conversations like this among other veg*ns is entirely a different affair than doing it in an environment where the average response is just "hell no, I love my meat"
The 5% might not be lost causes.
My unpopular opinion: I don't really care about a chicken as long as human beings suffer.
In the best of worlds, sure, but today? Not so much.
Is it really that hard to care about both?
Oh I can care about them both. No problem! Won't really do anything but hey, let's care instead of getting our hands dirty eh.
Okay then, is it really that much harder to care about and do something to help both as opposed to just one or the other?
I assume that, given the choice, you'd still prefer people to be vegetarian than carnivorous though.
In which situation does a person gets to chose another random person eating habits?
When you're put in charge of making food for people and choice of food is up to you?
Not really the point of my comment.
Your comment is disingenuous because you asked if one would prefer if others were carnivorous or vegetarian. This is nonsense because you don't get to chose what other peoples eating habits.
When you make food for people you ask them what they eat before you serve them something they cannot or don't want to eat.
Sheesh. So sorry for asking a person's preference. I'm not going to dignify this further.
Ah I thought you were one of those anti vegan people. I'm too stupid for Lemmy, I always imagine the worse. Gonna delete this app. Sorry.
Get of social media and have some constructive discussions here, bro ^^
Well yeah, of course. This was mostly about the people who call themselves ethical vegetarians tbh.
I suppose ethics is a spectrum.
of course, but in this situation it's pretty simple. how do you act with the choice given.
Sure, but that's like saying "I don't shoot dogs, I just kick them." Like, sure, I guess that's better, but when you say you do it because you "care about dogs," that doesn't make sense.
Not sure why this needs to go off piste. It's like saying I don't shoot and eat [animal] for sustenance, I milk [animal] for sustenance. It's up to individuals to decide if that is conscionable or not, maybe impacted by whether you think they're inconsistent and maybe not.
I think this is where the disconnect is. It's not just milking an animal. It's getting her pregnant, taking her child away from her shortly after birth and killing it. It's keeping her trapped in a tiny pen for her whole life, barely able to move. Then, when she can no longer produce milk, kill her, 6 years into her 20-year lifespan.
Dairy is cruel. Arguably more cruel than meat.
Exactly this. I'd kinda rather people ate meat and not dairy than the opposite, the dairy industry is fucked up.
A lot factory farming is absolutely cruel yes, but production of plenty of animal based products doesn't necessarily have to be. I've raised chickens before, eggs generally tasted better and the chickens were treated like pets (they weren't meant for their meat). It's a spectrum, the goal as a vegetarian is to reduce harm.
Did you have male chickens too at an even ratio? Or just egg laying hens?
I'm not the person you responded to, but I'm another crazy chicken person. I have three ladies and one boy chicken. They have a half acre to run around on typically, but right now I have them in the plot where we grow vegetables so they can break up and fertilize the ground.
Having a rooster for free range chickens is, in my opinion, 100% necessary. My roo does a good job of herding the ladies into the coop when he sees a hawk or anything else he thinks is dangerous. He also makes sure all three hens get food, instead of one of them eating everything. When the sun goes down, he rounds up the girls and they head into the coop to sleep. Here is a pic of my roo, he's quite the gentleman.
Are the eggs you eat generally fertilized? Does it make them any different or are they eaten too quickly for it to matter?
Some are but most aren't. Can't really tell a difference.