ancapailldorcha wrote: » I've seen this cropping up more and more in some discussions online whereby anyone who criticises or condemns animal cruelty will often be met with comments that people who eat meat are either hypocrites or are incapable of sincerely caring about animals. I eat meat. I'm one of those people who learned to make about half a dozen meals and stopped because that was sufficient. I like meat if I'm going to be honest but I do concede that consuming it is horrible for the environment and morally dubious at best. I grew up on a sheep farm and we always tried to treat the animals properly. They were vaccinated, checked for parasites, etc but otherwise left alone most days of the year. We'd take them in for winter and they'd be fed silage and meal pellets but that's not a good example of the sort of huge scale meat production you see in more industrialised and post-industrialised countries like the USA and China. I don't really know then. Is the question of this thread's title valid?
Gregor Samsa wrote: » You can be anything you want to be.
Meeoow wrote: » I've recently gone sort of vegetarian for health and animal welfare reasons. I still eat fish, but make sure its not farmed fish. I used to buy free range chicken, and the taste of it compared to cheap chickens is day and night. But as a poster above said, what really is shocking, is people buying a big plate of food, picking at it, then scraping it into the bin. I just want to shout at them to think of the poor animal that had a sh1t life, then a sh1t death, and ends up in the bin.
touts wrote: » I care about animals. But most only exist because they will ultimately be eaten. These animal rights campaigners who seem to think that we should return to having vast herds of cattle and sheep roaming free and happy across the Irish countryside like God intended clearly have no concept of just how stupid and dependent on humans these animals are. 99.99% would starve to death or succumb to disease were it not for the farmers who look after them. So I say give as many of them as possible the best possible existence and then slap them up on my plate.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I think you can. It's the circle of life. Humans are omnivores. I endeavour to buy meat that has been hunted rather than meat that has been sent to a slaughterhouse. I could personally never kill the animal myself, but I think it's more humane to have been hunted. What a lot of vegans/vegetarians fail to grasp is that a large number of animals are killed in order to provide them with their food.
ThewhiteJesus wrote: » I’ll only eat mistreated animals that were tortured to death
ancapailldorcha wrote: » I eat meat. I'm one of those people who learned to make about half a dozen meals and stopped because that was sufficient. I like meat if I'm going to be honest but I do concede that consuming it is horrible for the environment and morally dubious at best.
Church on Tuesday wrote: » Well some animals just happen to be delicious and as a human being with teeth designed for eating meat, I have no problem in the slightest with eating them.
Deleted User wrote: » Why is it morally dubious? Morals tend to be individualistic in nature, so, people pushing the belief that it's morally wrong are simply pushing that their morals are more important than other peoples. no? Sorry. I don't get the logic that says eating meat is morally wrong. I can understand the biological/scientific arguments that might suggest that it's unhealthy (although i'll probably continue eating it anyway)
1990sman wrote: » we probably wouldnt be here talking about it if our ancestors didnt eat meat, next time u meet a rasher or steak u should probably kneel and thank it.