• @primbin
    link
    410 months ago

    Humans in developed countries are in a position where we can reduce our harm to others. I believe that if you’re in a position to be safely and reasonably able to, that you should do your best to reduce the harm you cause. I would argue that reducing harm includes reducing the amount of animals that I eat.

    However, none of this really applies to animals. They don’t really get the same privileges that humans do in modern society, nor do they have the conscious ability to consider their harm on the world. Furthermore, obligate carnivores don’t really have a choice but to eat meat, so they wouldn’t be able to safely reduce the harm they cause regardless.

    • @Z3k3@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      110 months ago

      While I agree with your sentiment and am quite happy for us to move to a vegan diet it needs to be a generational project.

      Say you get your dream and we switch to a vegan diet tomorrow as a species what happens to all that live stock? Through centuries of selectve breading they are incapable of living in the wild. Do we just genocide them out of existence? So we let them suffer on their own? With rhe added benefit of throwing countless invasive species to knock everything out of balance further. Nether of these options sit right with me for a lot of reasons.

      On top of that look at the impact of palm oil plantations are having on the environment do you think that will be an isolated instance when we 100%

      The truth of the matter is the human species is just bad for everything including other humans.

      The chase needed is impossible in a short amount of time (but I don’t think its impossible)

      Those screaming in people’s faces do more to harm that progress.

      I saw something saying Americans (I’m not one) are now buying more non dairy milk than dairy now