View Full Version : Animal rights
PowerWizard
06-03-2009, 16:05
Do animals have rights? If yes, what kind of rights should they enjoy?
Rhyfelwyr
06-03-2009, 16:20
The right to be on my plate.
There are anti-cruelty laws on the books here in the USA, and limited hunting seasons, so they I wouldn't call them "rights" but they have some minor protections.
PowerWizard
06-03-2009, 16:24
I mean WTF is wrong with a bullfight?
tibilicus
06-03-2009, 16:57
I mean WTF is wrong with a bullfight?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Singer
This guy tries to explain it..
Apparently, according to Singer, a bulls life has more value than an unborn baby..
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 17:17
No, animals don't have rights. The argument would have to be, to what extent are we obliged to treat them humanely?
Animals 'rights' is a bit of a silly concept, we need animal rules.
Hooahguy
06-03-2009, 17:42
No, animals don't have rights. The argument would have to be, to what extent are we obliged to treat them humanely?
:yes:
while we shouldnt torture them, bullfighting and the like shouldnt be a problem.
Aemilius Paulus
06-03-2009, 17:43
Animals 'rights' is a bit of a silly concept, we need animal rules.
Yeah! Until the animals follow out rules, there will be no rights for them!!
Which is why murderers have rights in our society.
Vladimir
06-03-2009, 17:49
Animals will have rights once they draft the Animal Declaration of Independence. Then we'll know they're serious.
I mean WTF is wrong with a bullfight?
I don“t think there is anything wrong with a bullfight itself....
I do think there is something wrong with people who like to watch a bullfight for entertainment....but what do I know? :juggle2:
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 17:54
Yeah! Until the animals follow out rules, there will be no rights for them!!
Which is why murderers have rights in our society.
The right to be put to death and the right to be imprisoned?
I do think there is something wrong with people who like to watch a bullfight for entertainment
I've seen clips of them...I don't think the entertainment comes from the bull being killed.
Dutch_guy
06-03-2009, 18:36
Animals will have rights once they draft the Animal Declaration of Independence. Then we'll know they're serious.
That'd be pretty awesome. :beam:
:balloon2:
seireikhaan
06-03-2009, 18:44
Pshh. The only innate right animals have is to remain tasty.
Heck, humans don't have any innate rights. ~:rolleyes:
LittleGrizzly
06-03-2009, 18:44
I dislike bull fighting cock fighting or any other kind of making animals fight, i have no problem with animals being killed for skin/fur, meat and just about anything else useful. I don't have a problem with animals dieing to serve humans such as rescue dogs and the like...
But i do draw the line at killing animals purely for entertainment, this may come across as kind of christian thinking but i think life is precious and we shouldn't waste it needlessly...
I don't really have a problem with hunting, i would have a problem with hunting for entertainment just to kill the animal for the thrill of the hunt, and then just leave it (though i suppose it wouldn't be wasted as other animals would consume it) I think if you are going to take an animals life you owe it to the animal to get every bit of use out of it you can...
Hunting done for entertainment and to consume the animal, or done for entertainment and to help control animal populations is fine by me...
I've seen clips of them...I don't think the entertainment comes from the bull being killed.
Eh, I think ritually slaughtering a bull for entertainment is cruel whether the people are watching it to see a bull get killed or whether they are watching to see if the matador gets killed. :shrug:
Repeatedly stabbing an animal with spears until it's too weak to stand and then killing it with a sword isn't my idea of a good time. :no:
But, on the original question- animals have no rights. They only have protections that we choose to give them.
LittleGrizzly
06-03-2009, 18:58
Wow, hell just got a little colder....
I have to admit watching animals fight on the discovery channel or something, that is great fun, but it has a purpose, it is not us needlessly putting an animal to death for our own amusement.
HoreTore
06-03-2009, 19:00
I'm all for animal rights(or rules, or laws, or magic fairies, or whatever).
We eat animals for food, yes. But what did your mom tell you when you threw peas across the table as a kid? Don't play with your food!
Cruelty is a big no. That means things like having them fight each other, hurting them for fun/sport, giving them improper care if they're in your care, etc.
I see no reason for innocent animals to suffer from some whacko's sadism. They should get a whip, gagball and a prostitute instead, like us normal people.
Yeah! Until the animals follow out rules, there will be no rights for them!!
Which is why murderers have rights in our society.
Why should they have rights they don't understand. Hence rules, should be as painless and stressless as possible.
Animals should have rights. It is not unnatural for humans to eat (cooked) meat, and thus I can respect it if people should desire to eat meat. I draw the line at cruelty. Cruelty for your own personal pleasure (bullfighting) is sickening to me. Imagine if we were put in an arena and forced to fight eachother to the death.
Live and let live.
Think about it, animal rights, how would they make claim. We don't need animal rights we need human decency.
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 20:38
Eh, I think ritually slaughtering a bull for entertainment is cruel whether the people are watching it to see a bull get killed or whether they are watching to see if the matador gets killed. :shrug:
Repeatedly stabbing an animal with spears until it's too weak to stand and then killing it with a sword isn't my idea of a good time. :no:
Eh, it's fun to watch for reasons that aren't tied up with cruelty. Just like those videos of bears fighting on the discovery channel. And if your against animals dying for our viewing pleasure then you should be a vegetarian--there's no significant difference between tasting pleasure and viewing pleasure.
I'm all for animal rights(or rules, or laws, or magic fairies, or whatever).
We eat animals for food, yes. But what did your mom tell you when you threw peas across the table as a kid? Don't play with your food!
If animals have rights then it is wrong to kill them for food and wrong to test vaccines and medicine on them.
Animals should have rights. It is not unnatural for humans to eat (cooked) meat, and thus I can respect it if people should desire to eat meat. I draw the line at cruelty. Cruelty for your own personal pleasure (bullfighting) is sickening to me. Imagine if we were put in an arena and forced to fight eachother to the death.
Live and let live.
Imagine if we were cast out in to the wild and forced to survive with no shelter or clothes. Imagine if we were raised in farms and slaughtered for food. Animals aren't human. Would you arrest a lion for murdering a giraffe?
People mistakingly assume that animals feel as we do, because we naturally try to assign human feelings and motives to everything we see. Today we laugh at Xerxes for having the sea whipped and poked with hot irons because he blamed it for trashing his bridge, but we still make the same mistake with animals. "life is precious" assumes that an animals life is the same as a human life, and saying that animals are "innocent" assumes a capacity that they don't have.
People assume that since they find bullfighting repulsive, that anyone who enjoys watching it must be "sick". No different from people finding homosexuality repulsive and thinking that gay people are sick. ~D
FactionHeir
06-03-2009, 20:41
I'm surprised no one brought up PETA yet :grin:
People mistakingly assume that animals feel as we do
Well I don't know if they do, but there is NEVER an excuse for cruelty.
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 20:57
People mistakingly assume that animals feel as we do
Well I don't know if they do, but there is NEVER an excuse for cruelty.
Saying something is cruel involves assumptions. To keep a person confined to the house at all times would be cruel, but that's what you do to your cat to treat it well.
It is certainly possible to be cruel to animals, but you can't go by knee jerk reactions like animal rights people tend to.
People don't watch bullfights to see the bull get cut to pieces, they watch bullfights because there is a chance (albeit small) that the matador will have a very bad day.
Fragony is on the right track. Animals are there for our use, but that is no excuse for making their existence, and their deaths, cruel and painfully long. We also need to think long-term about their survival and proper role in the food chain.
Saying something is cruel involves assumptions.
As does the opposite, naturally.
PowerWizard
06-03-2009, 21:19
Animals should have rights.
Going by that vague statement, I demand the voting rights of the crocodiles.
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 21:43
As does the opposite, naturally.
That's kind of a false equivalence isn't it? Assuming that animals react the same as humans is different from assuming they don't.
That's kind of a false equivalence isn't it? Assuming that animals react the same as humans is different from assuming they don't.Another false equivalence would be equating slowly killing an animal for amusement to slaughtering one for sustenance. :yes:
I don't think I'm climbing too far out on a limb to assume that a bull doesn't enjoy being stabbed repeatedly. Does it feel fear or terror in the exact same way humans do? Probably not. But we still look down on people who have dogs fight to the death for entertainment.
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 22:23
Another false equivalence would be equating slowly killing an animal for amusement to slaughtering one for sustenance. :yes:
I didn't equate them, so...
You have the mistaken assumption that bullfights are about enjoying the pain of the matador or bull--do you think people watch boxing because they like seeing people in pain? I suppose the only reason people watch nascar is for the car crashes.
If you took a brain scan of someone enjoying a spectacle and scan of someone enjoying a steak how different would they be? Doesn't our feeling of enjoyment come from a certain chemical regardless of what we're enjoying? Dopamine or something? I don't know much about brain chemistry.
I don't think I'm climbing too far out on a limb to assume that a bull doesn't enjoy being stabbed repeatedly. Does it feel fear or terror in the exact same way humans do? Probably not. But we still look down on people who have dogs fight to the death for entertainment.
I said the same thing earlier :no:
But once you stop equating animal experience to human experience then it is a question of how anthropocentric you are willing to be. Is it ok to to keep your dog chained up? Peoples gut tells them yes, just like it tells them that bullfights are wrong. But if you actually wanted to think about it you would have to come up with some criteria for determining when it is ok. You can't just rely on your moral instinct, because people generally don't do things they consider wrong...most criminals have justified their own actions and feel they are ok.
HoreTore
06-03-2009, 22:33
If animals have rights then it is wrong to kill them for food
Of course not, they are food. Who said they should be given a right to protect them from being killed and eaten? Not me, I said they should be protected from being some sadistic nuts plaything. Which is something quite different.
and wrong to test vaccines and medicine on them.
If it's some unnecessary thing, sure, I'd put that in the "sadistic nuts plaything"-bin. But if it's something vaguely useful, then sure. They are, afterall, our underlings, and again, who said they should be given a right against being used in medical experiments?
To keep a person confined to the house at all times would be cruel, but that's what you do to your cat to treat it well.
WHAT?!?!??!?!
I must admit I spoke too soon;
In my opinion, animals (as HoreTore stated) animals should be protected against human cruelty. Rights is a bit of a vague term in this case. As far as we know (thanks for all the fish) animals lack the consciousness that humans have. The situation is even more difficult because we don't know any species who have the same consciousness (or close to) that humans have.
If it's some unnecessary thing, sure, I'd put that in the "sadistic nuts plaything"-bin. But if it's something vaguely useful, then sure. They are, afterall, our underlings, and again, who said they should be given a right against being used in medical experiments?
I prefer this being tested on humans. If we wish to mess around with natural selection, I'd say that we are responsible. Animals should not be made to suffer because of benefits to humans.*
Generally, I do not see animals as underlings, but just as different beings on this planet. In many aspects, I think their lives to be better of that of humans because they lack conscience. They work in perfect harmony with nature. Stephen Fry once said:
"If you look outside, the only ugly things you will see are manmade. Everything in nature, be it a desert, swamp, lake, plain is beautiful in its own right."
The same goes for animals, in my opinion. Not so much that they have extraordinary beauty (a rabbit with Shopes Papiloma (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shopes_Papilloma) can be quite revolting, but in the sense that they live in harmony with nature, which humans have trouble with at points. I'm not saying we are incapable of doing so, but in animals it is innate, for humans it has to be learned.
This might be my Buddhist philosophy coming up though.
I think that animals should only be killed for a useful purpose and that it should be done quickly.
Would you arrest a lion for murdering a giraffe?
A lion doesn't inflict multiple small wounds with the intention of causing harm but not death, a lion is simply trying kill its prey to be eaten.
That said, I quite enjoy killing cane toads, which are Australia's worst pest. Ask any Queenslander or northern New South Welshman, it's practically a sport over here. Sure I wouldn't kill them if they weren't a pest, but I enjoy it, and I do it in ways that would probably be considered cruel, golf clubs, shovels, cricket bats etc, and having cane toad guts on your wheels is a testament to you driving skills :2thumbsup:
I suppose it comes down to what feels wrong, and that is different for everyone. I personally don't feel that squishing a cane toad till its guts are coming out of it's still living mouth to be wrong, but I do consider the example of bull fighting to be wrong. :shrug:
But we should all remember that killing pandas (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WqX2aqXbwB0) for fun is always right. :skull:
I suppose the only reason people watch nascar is for the car crashes.
Of course they do, watching a car drive in a circle 300 times isn't fun. You Americans have funny taste in racing. :laugh4:
HoreTore
06-03-2009, 23:25
A lion doesn't inflict multiple small wounds with the intention of causing harm but not death, a lion is simply trying kill its prey to be eaten.
Also, I think it's safe to say that we humans are a few steps up the ladder from other animals when it comes to our ability to think. At least some of us are...
LittleGrizzly
06-03-2009, 23:31
Personally i don't even kill bugs... if one is really really being a pain and i can only kill it not get it away from me... i probably would kill it... but since i decided bugs, although ugly and somewhat creepy, are still an independent living organism deserving of life, i will not kill them off unless they greatly inconvenience me...
I think there is a huge difference for using an animal the way nature intended, for its meat and fur, and inflicting pain and suffering on them for our own sadistic pleasure... i would say out in nature where animals are fighting for terroritory or thier young and we just happen to be filming it thats fine... its not really seeing the animals fight that bothers me, animal fighting like on the discovery channel is good stuff. Its the fact that humans forced them into that situation for thier own pleasure...
I would only chain my dog up (or more likely tie his lead to a fence) whilst i popped into the shop or something... i would say it is wrong to keep a dog chained up to long...
Don Corleone
06-03-2009, 23:35
They should get a whip, gagball and a prostitute instead, like us normal people.
:furious3::furious3::furious3: WTF part of "This is just between us" did you have trouble understanding!?!? :furious3::furious3::furious3:
Sasaki Kojiro
06-03-2009, 23:37
Of course not, they are food. Who said they should be given a right to protect them from being killed and eaten?
Vegans.
If it's some unnecessary thing, sure, I'd put that in the "sadistic nuts plaything"-bin. But if it's something vaguely useful, then sure. They are, afterall, our underlings, and again, who said they should be given a right against being used in medical experiments?
Vaccines will have to be tested on living subjects at some point, it should always be animals first.
WHAT?!?!??!?!
Outside cats get all kinds of diseases. Our vet was fairly adamant that cats should be kept indoors and I tend to trust him because cats getting diseases would be good business for him...
Generally, I do not see animals as underlings, but just as different beings on this planet. In many aspects, I think their lives to be better of that of humans because they lack conscience. They work in perfect harmony with nature. Stephen Fry once said:
"If you look outside, the only ugly things you will see are manmade. Everything in nature, be it a desert, swamp, lake, plain is beautiful in its own right."
Ugly is a human concept though...and swamps are pretty ugly imo.
A lion doesn't inflict multiple small wounds with the intention of causing harm but not death, a lion is simply trying kill its prey to be eaten.
In a bullfight, they make the wounds to the neck not to cause harm, but to weaken the bull so that they can kill it safely. Lions probably do something similar to giraffes, and wolves certainly do to elk and such. House cats on the other hand, are well know for playing with their food, it's where we get the saying "a game of cat and mouse".
HoreTore
06-04-2009, 00:25
:furious3::furious3::furious3: WTF part of "This is just between us" did you have trouble understanding!?!? :furious3::furious3::furious3:
Naughty language, naughty boy! Do I have to give you another round of :whip: ?
Vegans.
They're irrelevant loonies. Nobody cares about what they have to say.
Vaccines will have to be tested on living subjects at some point, it should always be animals first.
Of course. Which is why I said so....
Outside cats get all kinds of diseases. Our vet was fairly adamant that cats should be kept indoors and I tend to trust him because cats getting diseases would be good business for him...
That vet should be slapped silly.
I didn't equate them, so...
You have the mistaken assumption that bullfights are about enjoying the pain of the matador or bull--do you think people watch boxing because they like seeing people in pain? I suppose the only reason people watch nascar is for the car crashes.Yeah, I'd say bullfighting boils down to slowly killing the animal the same way that boxing boils down to people punching the crap out of each other. People can root for their favorite personalities and enjoy the skill shown by the participants, but the point and end result is to kill the bull. That's why you go- to see a man slowly kill a bull. At least in boxing, both participants are consenting. I'm sure in traditional bull-fighting areas it's also used as a hub for social gatherings and interactions, but the end purpose of it all is still the same.
I can accept "cruelty"- for a necessary purpose. Does hunting involve pain and suffering for animals? I think yes- in many cases. But at least that serves a population management purpose and also serves as food to the hunters in addition to the "sport" of it.
If someone wants to go hunting, blow the kneecaps off a deer and let it lie their struggling until his buddies can gather around and watch him finish it off with a sword- then I would have a problem with it.
If you took a brain scan of someone enjoying a spectacle and scan of someone enjoying a steak how different would they be? Doesn't our feeling of enjoyment come from a certain chemical regardless of what we're enjoying? Dopamine or something? I don't know much about brain chemistry. Who cares? It's not the fact that people are enjoying themselves that's at issue. I don't mind if someone enjoys their steak- I just prefer it that that cow it came from was killed as quickly and painlessly as feasible.
But once you stop equating animal experience to human experience then it is a question of how anthropocentric you are willing to be. Is it ok to to keep your dog chained up? Peoples gut tells them yes, just like it tells them that bullfights are wrong. But if you actually wanted to think about it you would have to come up with some criteria for determining when it is ok. You can't just rely on your moral instinct, because people generally don't do things they consider wrong...most criminals have justified their own actions and feel they are ok.I think a dog would prefer to be allowed to roam free, sure. But what's the purpose for chaining it? To keep it from getting run over by a car, or from killing or being killed by another dog, or even to keep it from attacking a person. Is it needlessly cruel to chain a dog for its protection and the protection of others? Of course not. You keep wildly tossing out these examples, but I fail to see how any are analogous with bull fighting. :shrug:
A good analogy might be dog fighting...but then those are also viewed pretty universally as cruel too, so that may not help your case much.
Crazed Rabbit
06-04-2009, 01:41
I'm for eating meat and I don't mind circuses keeping animals. I'm undecided on bull fighting.
But I don't think animals should have cosmetics tested on them. It's torture and without any benefit to science. Even when you kill an animal to eat it, you don't let it suffer in agony for days on end.
EDIT:
A lion doesn't inflict multiple small wounds with the intention of causing harm but not death, a lion is simply trying kill its prey to be eaten.
I've seen my dog play with mice he's caught in a field. He'll bite it, then drop it, again and again, until the mouse is dead and stops squeaking. As Sasaki has ably pointed out, animals are not people - they don't think or feel as we do.
CR
Samurai Waki
06-04-2009, 02:02
no, animals don't have rights. However, they should be respected, to maintain conservation for our own well being.
Aemilius Paulus
06-04-2009, 02:08
I've seen my dog play with mice he's caught in a field. He'll bite it, then drop it, again and again, until the mouse is dead and stops squeaking. As Sasaki has ably pointed out, animals are not people - they don't think or feel as we do.
CR
:laugh4::laugh4::laugh4::laugh4::laugh4::laugh4::laugh4:
The irony... After Holocaust, Holodomor, Armenian Genocide, Tutsi Genocide, Great Purges, Mongol's extermination of Chinese peasantry (tens of millions dead), and Mao's antics, just to name a few you still say animals do not feel as us? Well, heck, you are right. They are above such things. If they knew about the :daisy: we do, I am sure they would utter the same as you declared on their nature.
Sasaki Kojiro
06-04-2009, 02:18
I've seen my dog play with mice he's caught in a field. He'll bite it, then drop it, again and again, until the mouse is dead and stops squeaking. As Sasaki has ably pointed out, animals are not people - they don't think or feel as we do.
CR
Exactly. It's a fairly standard way for animals to hunt. Great Whites will bite once and the circle until their prey has bled and weakened (assuming it's big enough they can't swallow it) rather than risk injury.
The reason they stab the bull prior to the kill is to weaken it with some blood loss and to weaken the neck muscles so it keeps its head lower, allowing it to be killed in a single stroke of the sword.
It just seems like people trying to rationalize a personal distaste. Killing animals? That's fine, just don't hurt them. Animals dying horrible deaths in the wild? That's fine, it's natural.
In reality, the entire animal rights movement is self serving--it's about what we feel about animals rather than what they feel. Which is fine up to a point. It's natural to think of animals in human terms:
https://img387.imageshack.us/img387/6124/9620concerned20cat.jpg
This cat is not "concerned" even though it looks like it.
So Sasaki, what level of animal cruelty, if any do you have a problem with? We're apparently justified in doing anything, since it happens in the wilds anyhow. What was wrong with what Michael Vick did? Nothing right? In the wild, dogs regularly fight and kill each other- so there's nothing wrong with doing it for sport, clearly.
I'd post some bullfighting videos, but I'm not sure they're backroom appropriate. But certainly, there's nothing wrong with spearing a bull until it's too weak to run when the matador shoves a sword through its neck. And it's perfectly alright to watch it stagger around, coughing up buckets of blood until it finally falls over with its legs kicking as the matador runs in to cut its ears off for safe-keeping. I mean, wolves would brutally kill them in the wild, so it's fine.
I've seen similarly horrible videos of slaughter houses that PETA loons put up, but again, the purpose is the difference. In slaughter houses, it's over quickly and the the killed animals serve an important purpose as food for us.
Aemilius Paulus
06-04-2009, 02:57
I am certain lowering ourselves to animal levels, and justifying our cruelty by the cruelty of animals toward each other is the best way :grin: just like US justifying torture by the murders of the "terrorists".
Not that I am against torture or against cruelty towards animals, it is simply that I felt it fitting to point our errors and flaws in reasoning.
CountArach
06-04-2009, 03:23
I'm all for animal rights(or rules, or laws, or magic fairies, or whatever).
We eat animals for food, yes. But what did your mom tell you when you threw peas across the table as a kid? Don't play with your food!
Cruelty is a big no. That means things like having them fight each other, hurting them for fun/sport, giving them improper care if they're in your care, etc.
Pretty much this IMO.
Sasaki Kojiro
06-04-2009, 03:46
So Sasaki, what level of animal cruelty, if any do you have a problem with? We're apparently justified in doing anything, since it happens in the wilds anyhow. What was wrong with what Michael Vick did? Nothing right? In the wild, dogs regularly fight and kill each other- so there's nothing wrong with doing it for sport, clearly.
I'd post some bullfighting videos, but I'm not sure they're backroom appropriate. But certainly, there's nothing wrong with spearing a bull until it's too weak to run when the matador shoves a sword through its neck. And it's perfectly alright to watch it stagger around, coughing up buckets of blood until it finally falls over with its legs kicking as the matador runs in to cut its ears off for safe-keeping. I mean, wolves would brutally kill them in the wild, so it's fine.
I've seen bullfighting videos...
What level of animal cruelty is ok? I'm not sure. That's the real question here, and a more complicated one--that's what I've been driving at this whole time.
We agree that it isn't the suffering of the animal that's wrong, correct? Otherwise it would be immoral not to stop animals from killing each other in the wild. And the discovery channel would have to be shut down, what with all the videos of animals killing each other they show.
It's only when a person becomes involved that we have a problem. And there is certainly merit to this. Our empathy for animals stems from the same part of our brain as our empathy for people. So someone who tortures kittens and puppies for fun probably has serious problems. But someone who keeps a house cat that tortures and kills mice and birds--we're fine with that because we know the person is still a good person.
Now, personally I have empathy for animals--don't like seeing them get hurt etc. But bulls express nothing remotely human to me. Same as spiders, fish, rats etc. You feel differently, you're more sensitive to it's suffering evidently. So who is right? Vegetarians want to step it up a notch from your position, vegans another notch, and those buddhists who won't step on ants take it to the extreme.
I say, call it what it is, a personal distaste, not a moral wrong--unless you can show that the person is messed up in the head (which was the basis of the charge against Vick...).
I've seen similarly horrible videos of slaughter houses that PETA loons put up, but again, the purpose is the difference. In slaughter houses, it's over quickly and the the killed animals serve an important purpose as food for us.
1) They eat the bull after the fight
2) We don't need to eat meat
3) We would have more food if we didn't raise cows (they take a lot of feeding).
So, your justification for slaughter houses over bullfighting boils down to: in bullfighting, the animal is in a certain amount of pain before it dies. They use cattle prods to keep the bulls in line before slaughtering them, and I feel safe in saying that the conditions inside the slaughterhouse are much worse than where the bull's are bred for the fight.
Like I said, I feel like people invent these reasons based an instinctive distaste. The real reason eating meat is ok is because to suggest that going to the store and picking up a plastic bag of beef jerky means you lack empathy is laughable.
Aliens called, they want to farm humans as their food source.
Papewaio
06-04-2009, 06:47
Now, personally I have empathy for animals--don't like seeing them get hurt etc. But bulls express nothing remotely human to me.
As a farm kid for beef cattle, all one needs to do is look into their eyes to know that they are on par with a dog... not a particular smart one... they would be the Paris Hiltons of the dog world... but they do have some inkling of intelligence.
1) They eat the bull after the fight
2) We don't need to eat meat
3) We would have more food if we didn't raise cows (they take a lot of feeding).
So, your justification for slaughter houses over bullfighting boils down to: in bullfighting, the animal is in a certain amount of pain before it dies. They use cattle prods to keep the bulls in line before slaughtering them, and I feel safe in saying that the conditions inside the slaughterhouse are much worse than where the bull's are bred for the fight.
Stressed animals meat is tougher and they are harder to handle. Smart cattle yards will avoid stressing their product as it costs them.
Also most beef cattle I have seen on farms in NZ and Aus are bigger and healthier then those I have seen in the running for the bulls and bull fighting. Angus and Maine Anjou are far larger animals. Essentially either the bull fighters are all 7' tall or the bulls are tiny and underfed compared with meat live stock.
Just did my research.
A Spanish Fighting Bull weighs from 500 to 700kg.
A Maine-Anjoy cow weighs from 680 to 860kg, whilst the bulls weigh a 1000kg to 1400kg.
Essentially the matadors are fighting the cattle equivalent of Shetland ponies. :laugh4:
That's kind of a false equivalence isn't it? Assuming that animals react the same as humans is different from assuming they don't.
The opposite of assuming something is cruel, is assuming it is not cruel. Humans cannot magically enter the equation.
If A is an assumption, then NOT A is also an assumption. If A is true, NOT A is false, and we no longer have assumptions about A, but assumptions regarding the validity of the established "truth" of A. I believe..
Assumptions begin where proof ends, no?
Meneldil
06-04-2009, 15:07
But once you stop equating animal experience to human experience then it is a question of how anthropocentric you are willing to be. Is it ok to to keep your dog chained up? Peoples gut tells them yes, just like it tells them that bullfights are wrong. But if you actually wanted to think about it you would have to come up with some criteria for determining when it is ok. You can't just rely on your moral instinct, because people generally don't do things they consider wrong...most criminals have justified their own actions and feel they are ok.
Do you have any proof that animals don't feel the way we do?
First of all, you're assuming that all humans feel a same way, which is plainly incorrect. Some have a problem with bullfighting, some don't. Some have a problem with killing animals, some don't. Some have a problem with hurting others, some willingly decided to kill hundreds of other men. Some dislike pain, some enjoy it.
Second of all, there are several instances of animals showing what could be described as human emotions and feelings. Look at Louis VI's topic on homosexuality for example.
I remember this TV show in which an oran utang became friend with a cat. Some day, the cat died, and the ape spent days crying, not eating and lamenting alone.
Some animals have proved in many instances that they can feel what could be described as love, friendship, sadness, cruelty. Scientists and searchers still work on this topic, and all current work tend to prove that animals have feelings that are sometimes quite similars to humans' ones.
Assuming without any actual basis that animals don't feel like humans do is IMO a misconception.
To take your example, dogs certainly don't like to be chained up. They might not see it as slavery, they might not be outraged by it, but they don't like it nonetheless (or it is widely observed that they prefer to not be chained up).
I won't comment on bullfights, because IMO it's nothing more than the remnants of arenas ritual sacrifices.
Exactly. It's a fairly standard way for animals to hunt. Great Whites will bite once and the circle until their prey has bled and weakened (assuming it's big enough they can't swallow it) rather than risk injury.
So what ? Are you advocating that we shouldn't avoid painless dead, because it will be easier to kill a cow that way ? Because Great Whites do it when they hunt ? I'm kind of lost here.
We agree that it isn't the suffering of the animal that's wrong, correct? Otherwise it would be immoral not to stop animals from killing each other in the wild. And the discovery channel would have to be shut down, what with all the videos of animals killing each other they show.
It's only when a person becomes involved that we have a problem. And there is certainly merit to this. Our empathy for animals stems from the same part of our brain as our empathy for people. So someone who tortures kittens and puppies for fun probably has serious problems. But someone who keeps a house cat that tortures and kills mice and birds--we're fine with that because we know the person is still a good person.
Cruelty is not okay. Whether it's in the nature or in a slaughterhouse. Thing is, we cannot regulate how animals kill eachothers. Do you plan to set up a savannah police that will make sure the lion kills his preys decently ? We I watch a documentary in which a lion kills another animal, I'm not like "Hey, that's cool !". But then, I can't really put the lion in jail, or even convince him that he shouldn't do that. So heh, I don't bother.
Now, we can regulate how killing is done in slaughterhouse. We have both religious and secular laws to make sure that animal killing should be done accordingly to various principles that exclude unnecessary pain and cruelty.
In the end, it does not matter whether we think animals feel like us or not. Living accordingly to basic ethnic and rejecting useless cruelty is IMO what makes (some of) us specials.
After all this long rant, I'll conclude by saying that people who think it cool to kill a cat, a chicken or even a frog in the cruelest possible way, to record it and to put it on youtube deserve nothing but to be shot. Humanity deserves better than that.
I don't get the bullfighting dillemma, of course it's wrong. If that is your culture your culture is wrong. There is a lot of animal cruelty in Spain by the way, besides bullfighting tradition there is also the lovely hang the dogs after the hunt tradition, or the throw a goat from a tower festivities.
Second of all, there are several instances of animals showing what could be described as human emotions and feelings.
everyone with a pet knows that.
Kralizec
06-09-2009, 10:42
I don't think protecting animals against maltreatment is unimportant, but there's so much BS thrown around about it. A lot of people seem to think it's okay to wear leather clothes, but wearing fur is an abomination :dizzy2:
And I'm a lot more concerned with say, the Japanese sponsored genocide against tuna in the Mediterranean sea.
but wearing fur is an abomination :dizzy2:
It kinda is. We use the whole of a cow, I find the idea to kill animals for just their fur rather sickening. Taking a whole lot more then we need, it are living creatures. Just feels wrong.
Kralizec
06-09-2009, 21:53
It kinda is. We use the whole of a cow,
That's a fair point, hadn't considered that.
...
As for calling it "rights" , don't you people think that this:
The way you killed these cows is perfectly fine. But while they lived you forced them to live in a rather small space, so you violated their rights.
Is completely surreal?
I agree with Fragony, mostly.
Just what kind of weird topic is this, anyways? Me agreeing with Fragony of all people.
Aliens called, they want to farm humans as their food source.
Point has been missed.
Animal rights are none of our business, we got our rights, they got theirs.
When was the last time a lion or tiger cared about human rights anyway eh?
Next up we assign rights to malaria, ebola, the flu and streptococcus....
Animal rights are none of our business, we got our rights, they got theirs.
When was the last time a lion or tiger cared about human rights anyway eh?
Next up we assign rights to malaria, ebola, the flu and streptococcus....
Yes indeed, and before you know it you have climate-laws, as if the climate will obbey t-
no I didn't
Askthepizzaguy
06-10-2009, 17:06
It would be very difficult to define in terms of the law, I agree with that.
However there's a certain level of just plain illogical, irrational, destructive and pointless pain and torment that you should not inflict on a living being. To me, pulling the legs slowly off of an insect so you can torture it is sickening. Then again I have no problem with exterminating an insect infestation in my home.
Maybe Sasaki is right, that animals have no rights that can be compared to human rights. However, we must find our humanity itself and realize that what makes us so much more "enlightened" than the animals is that we have a brain that can reason and feel empathy and see the immorality of senseless, wanton destruction and cruelty.
There's no reason to slaughter a hundred pigs and just let them rot.
There's plenty of reason to slaughter a hundred pigs and feed people.
There's no reason to shoot neighborhood pets or even trap stray animals and torture them.
If your animal is very very old/frail and sick/in pain, and you are tired of watching it suffer, I don't see a problem with humanely ending their pain.
Now, how do you transform that into law? I don't know if you can. But there needs to be a discussion about it, and we need to agree on what actions, if any, should be penalized.
I think dogfighting is cruel and must be illegal.
I think cockfighting is the same way.
Bullfighting I think is cruel.
Animals raised for slaughter should be at least kept in safe, clean, suitable conditions, not stacked on top of one another sleeping in a giant pile of feces. That's just common sense stuff.
So... what makes things common sense stuff? There's some kind of logic at work, and if we can identify the precise wording of that logic, perhaps we can make law.
Granted there will always be room for interpretation of the law, but that is why cases are decided by people, not documents.
To me, pulling the legs slowly off of an insect so you can torture it is sickening.
If they can not experience "pain", then why not? If they can experience "pain", then what?
Askthepizzaguy
06-10-2009, 18:53
If they can not experience "pain", then why not? If they can experience "pain", then what?
Pain or not, it is needlessly destructive and it is cruel to the creature.
And simple observation and very basic scientific testing concludes that most creatures with a central nervous system experience pain. That is one of it's most basic functions; to keep the body intact and away from serious damage. Even the dumbest creatures experience pain that we can observe, or discomfort or irritation of some kind.
I do not see what moral value intentional cruel torment of a lesser being has. It is despicable.
Pain or not, it is needlessly destructive and it is cruel to the creature.
And simple observation and very basic scientific testing concludes that most creatures with a central nervous system experience pain. That is one of it's most basic functions; to keep the body intact and away from serious damage. Even the dumbest creatures experience pain that we can observe, or discomfort or irritation of some kind.
I do not see what moral value intentional cruel torment of a lesser being has. It is despicable.
Can a bug really feel "pain" though; just because it can react to stimulation? I do not see a direct link here.
And I would not call them "lesser"; if numbers is what matters, I think they're doing quite well. ;-)
Can a bug really feel "pain" though; just because it can react to stimulation? I do not see a direct link here.
Can a human really feel pain? What is pain more than just a mental stimulation that says "don't do that again"?
Major Robert Dump
06-11-2009, 01:40
I hunt boars with a revolver and large blade. I hunt bears with a bow. I hunt catfish with my hands. I hunt quail with a pistol that shoots buckshot. I hunt deer sometimes, but I'm not very good at it.
But I also eat them. And what I can't fit in the freezer I give away. Don't want the heads of things I've eaten looking at me in my living room. It's really got a lot less to do with sport than it has to do with filling my fat belly, time investiture and in a lot of peoples cases, spending time with the family and friends.
That being said, I really do think bullfighting is kind of sick. And I must admit, I take pleasure in seeing people get mauled at the running of the bulls. Animals are a lower species, no more sport than picking on retarded kids. And we can't eat retards.
Can a human really feel pain? What is pain more than just a mental stimulation that says "don't do that again"?
Do bugs have a psyche? I want to define pain as something uncomfortable. If you prod your hand with a finger, you'll feel it. It does not take pain to sense something. Obviously, the sensation of being damaged should be taken more seriously by the body than a mere touch, but a more vigorous reaction does not necessarily equal pain in the way a human would sense it.
Askthepizzaguy
06-11-2009, 10:29
I'm pretty sure if you start chopping off the toes of a cat, it will howl in pain, not curiosity.
Do bugs have a psyche? I want to define pain as something uncomfortable. If you prod your hand with a finger, you'll feel it. It does not take pain to sense something. Obviously, the sensation of being damaged should be taken more seriously by the body than a mere touch, but a more vigorous reaction does not necessarily equal pain in the way a human would sense it.
Doesn't really matter, why would you do such a thing regardless.
I'm pretty sure if you start chopping off the toes of a cat, it will howl in pain, not curiosity.
A cat makes no bug.
Doesn't really matter, why would you do such a thing regardless.
I'd say it is at the very core of the issue. If most anmials can feel pain like humans do, then one would expect that this would have a major impact. I feel no regret kicking the flower head of a dandelion.
Askthepizzaguy
06-11-2009, 12:26
A cat makes no bug.
So then you'd agree that a cat feels pain, much like a human being does.
Where does that logic start to break down? Does a dog not feel pain? A chimpanzee? Of course they do. What about a rabbit or a guinea pig? Of course. A crocodile? Yes indeed. What allows them to feel pain? Their nervous system.
It's possible that certain animals have certain body parts which experience no pain. A sheep doesn't care if you shave off it's wool. If you trim the nails of a dog properly, it doesn't yelp in pain. So I am sure that bugs and whatnot could perhaps have antennae or legs that if you rip off, they may not feel it.
What if I conceded the entire pain question, since I am not an expert. Let's say you could do anything you want to a bug and it felt no pain. Does that make it any less cruel to attempt to torture the creature, any less cruel to destroy them senselessly? If hollywood makes a horror film where they release a bunch of tarantulas onto the ground in a room, is it ok for the actors to just stomp all over them and spread their guts across the floor? Is it ok to take one of these creatures and start plucking their legs off and leave them to starve? There are people who have a rare condition which does not allow them to sense pain. Is it ok to injure them because it doesn't cause them to suffer the pain? Pain is only one part of the cruelty. What about the unnecessary injury or death of a creature?
Maybe it goes a step too far to say ok, don't ever eat an animal and don't ever accidentally step on a bug and don't get rid of pests inside your house. That's nature. What's unnatural is the fascination with senseless cruelty and destruction.
Call me a bleeding heart, maybe I am, but imagine we didn't need trees for oxygen or resources. Shouldn't it be a crime for someone to enter a forest and just start burning down all the trees? Or cutting them all down and destroying the natural environment just for the bizarre thrill of destroying things? I get that we cut down trees for wood and paper and so forth, or to clear an area for development... but these are things which serve a purpose. Destruction of living things without any reason still seems pointless and cruel to me.
Yeah, I am aware that such ideas are easy to mock, but the ideas in my opinion show a lot more concern for society, life in general, and the environment, and the view that you can maim or destroy living things frivolously just seems to be an absolute moral negative to me. Wasteful and senseless destruction, especially when it ends a life, especially when it causes torment and pain, is wrong.
I'd say it is at the very core of the issue. If most anmials can feel pain like humans do, then one would expect that this would have a major impact. I feel no regret kicking the flower head of a dandelion.
Nor I.... but I also don't for example take a bunch of herbicide and just sprinkle it all over the place for the fun of vandalizing property or destroying nature. There's no pain whatsoever involved, and it still seems wrong to me. It's a strange example but... most people have the good sense not to destroy things for no reason, especially living things, especially ones that feel pain. And if I cannot articulate why I think there is a universal moral and logical basis for this viewpoint, then it is because I'm not someone who grapples with moral truths for a living or even to any great extent as a hobby, but I still think there's something to it that gives it more value than reasonless killing of animals or cruel treatment thereof.
I am with ATPG, there is never an excuse for any sort of cruelty. Ask yourself this, when would you justify cruelty, at what point, and why. Why not ask why you need to justify it in the first place.
So then you'd agree that a cat feels pain, much like a human being does.
It appears to me so; I do not claim the knowledge. For whatever I know, humans are not the "smartest" specie on Earth (we do not have the biggest brains etc.).
Where does that logic start to break down? Does a dog not feel pain? A chimpanzee? Of course they do. What about a rabbit or a guinea pig? Of course. A crocodile? Yes indeed. What allows them to feel pain? Their nervous system.
It's possible that certain animals have certain body parts which experience no pain. A sheep doesn't care if you shave off it's wool. If you trim the nails of a dog properly, it doesn't yelp in pain. So I am sure that bugs and whatnot could perhaps have antennae or legs that if you rip off, they may not feel it.
What if I conceded the entire pain question, since I am not an expert. Let's say you could do anything you want to a bug and it felt no pain. Does that make it any less cruel to attempt to torture the creature, any less cruel to destroy them senselessly? If hollywood makes a horror film where they release a bunch of tarantulas onto the ground in a room, is it ok for the actors to just stomp all over them and spread their guts across the floor? Is it ok to take one of these creatures and start plucking their legs off and leave them to starve? There are people who have a rare condition which does not allow them to sense pain. Is it ok to injure them because it doesn't cause them to suffer the pain? Pain is only one part of the cruelty. What about the unnecessary injury or death of a creature?
Maybe it goes a step too far to say ok, don't ever eat an animal and don't ever accidentally step on a bug and don't get rid of pests inside your house. That's nature. What's unnatural is the fascination with senseless cruelty and destruction.
Call me a bleeding heart, maybe I am, but imagine we didn't need trees for oxygen or resources. Shouldn't it be a crime for someone to enter a forest and just start burning down all the trees? Or cutting them all down and destroying the natural environment just for the bizarre thrill of destroying things? I get that we cut down trees for wood and paper and so forth, or to clear an area for development... but these are things which serve a purpose. Destruction of living things without any reason still seems pointless and cruel to me.
Yeah, I am aware that such ideas are easy to mock, but the ideas in my opinion show a lot more concern for society, life in general, and the environment, and the view that you can maim or destroy living things frivolously just seems to be an absolute moral negative to me. Wasteful and senseless destruction, especially when it ends a life, especially when it causes torment and pain, is wrong.
The whole question of cruelty lies, as I view it, whether a being is conscient or not. Maybe it would suck to be a bug an get one's legs pulled of one by one, I do not know. If bugs are not aware of their own existence, and cannot feel discomfort; it is from their viewing angle impossible to experience cruelty.
Nor I.... but I also don't for example take a bunch of herbicide and just sprinkle it all over the place for the fun of vandalizing property or destroying nature. There's no pain whatsoever involved, and it still seems wrong to me. It's a strange example but... most people have the good sense not to destroy things for no reason, especially living things, especially ones that feel pain. And if I cannot articulate why I think there is a universal moral and logical basis for this viewpoint, then it is because I'm not someone who grapples with moral truths for a living or even to any great extent as a hobby, but I still think there's something to it that gives it more value than reasonless killing of animals or cruel treatment thereof.
All fine and well, but the topic reads "Animal rights", which implies laws rather than a personal choice. Of course, at some point in history, the latter led to the former..
The whole question of cruelty lies, as I view it, whether a being is conscient or not. Maybe it would suck to be a bug an get one's legs pulled of one by one, I do not know. If bugs are not aware of their own existence, and cannot feel discomfort; it is from their viewing angle impossible to experience cruelty.
The person doing it knows why he's doing it, to do harm for no reason whatsoever. Maybe bugs feel pain, at least he can't be bothered, having too much fun tearing of legs.
The person doing it knows why he's doing it, to do harm for no reason whatsoever. Maybe bugs feel pain, at least he can't be bothered, having too much fun tearing of legs.
Yes, probably he/she is doing it to be cruel; but what interests me is if it actually is cruel. A question of biology.
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