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d...@.  
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 More options Jul 3 2012, 12:42 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 12:42:05 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 3 2012 12:42 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
wrote:

>On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

    What sort of suffering do you think it inflicts to the point that you feel
the animals' lives are not worth living to the animals? Explain in detail which
livestock lives you feel are not worth living for the animals and why. Don't
just say "suffering" but explain what the suffering is from.

>It
>is not justifiable to inflict so much suffering just so that we can
>enjoy the taste of their flesh.

    As yet you have no argument whatsoever. On top of having no argument until
you produce examples of the types of suffering you're referring to, you also
have yet to appreciate when life is good for any animals other than grass raised
beef, and you can't decide whether you should be opposed to it or not. Also
grass raised dairy certainly seems like it should provide lives of positive
value not only for the cattle themselves, but also all the wildlife that
benefits from the environment. I believe it's safe to say that wildlife benefit
more from grass raised cattle farming than they do from soybean farming and rice
farming.

 
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 More options Jul 3 2012, 12:42 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 12:42:22 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 3 2012 12:42 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

    Rupert doesn't know what to think. He wants to be an eliminationist and an
AW supporter both at the same time, but since it doesn't work that way he can't
figure out what he thinks he thinks. He doesn't want to "give up" either
completely different position. As do you, he also still takes refuge in the
misnomer and is afraid to give it up.

 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 3 2012, 12:51 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 09:51:50 -0700
Local: Tues, Jul 3 2012 12:51 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Fuckwit David Harrison, convicted felon aka Bumbledork the Clown,
attempted to bullshit:

> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
> wrote:

>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.n t> wrote:
>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

>      What sort of suffering do you think it inflicts to the point that you feel
> the animals' lives are not worth living to the animals?

The animals lives have no moral meaning.  If the animals never exist and
therefore never "get to experience life", that has no meaning.

>> Itis not justifiable to inflict so much suffering just so that we can
>> enjoy the taste of their flesh.

>      As yet you have no argument whatsoever.

He has no less argument than you.

 
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Olrik  
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 More options Jul 3 2012, 11:24 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: Olrik <olrik...@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 23:24:20 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 3 2012 11:24 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Le 2012-07-03 12:42, dh@. a écrit :

> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
> wrote:

>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

I want pigs to lead a stupendously happy life until they become bacon.

 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 3 2012, 11:54 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 20:54:08 -0700
Local: Tues, Jul 3 2012 11:54 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On 7/3/2012 8:24 PM, Olrik wrote:

> Le 2012-07-03 12:42, dh@. a écrit :
>> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert
>> <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
>> wrote:

>>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

> I want pigs to lead a stupendously happy life until they become bacon.

That's good.  Just don't make the mistake of thinking that if they do,
it justifies eating them.  It doesn't.  The justification has to come
from elsewhere.

 
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Olrik  
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 More options Jul 4 2012, 12:02 am
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: Olrik <olrik...@yahoo.com>
Date: Wed, 04 Jul 2012 00:02:20 -0400
Local: Wed, Jul 4 2012 12:02 am
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Le 2012-07-03 23:54, George Plimpton a écrit :

> On 7/3/2012 8:24 PM, Olrik wrote:
>> Le 2012-07-03 12:42, dh@. a écrit :
>>> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert
>>> <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
>>> wrote:

>>>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>>>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

>> I want pigs to lead a stupendously happy life until they become bacon.

> That's good.  Just don't make the mistake of thinking that if they do,

They have no say in it.

> it justifies eating them.  It doesn't.  The justification has to come
> from elsewhere.

Like hungriness? Taste? Protein-intake?

 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 4 2012, 12:11 am
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2012 21:11:23 -0700
Local: Wed, Jul 4 2012 12:11 am
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On 7/3/2012 9:02 PM, Olrik wrote:

I didn't suggest they did.

>> it justifies eating them.  It doesn't.  The justification has to come
>> from elsewhere.

> Like hungriness? Taste? Protein-intake?

Possibly.

 
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Bob Casanova  
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 More options Jul 4 2012, 1:11 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: Bob Casanova <nos...@buzz.off>
Date: Wed, 04 Jul 2012 10:11:01 -0700
Local: Wed, Jul 4 2012 1:11 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On Tue, 03 Jul 2012 23:24:20 -0400, the following appeared
in sci.skeptic, posted by Olrik <olrik...@yahoo.com>:

>> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
>> wrote:
>>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.
>>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.
>I want pigs to lead a stupendously happy life until they become bacon.

Same here. And apparently Rupert is locked into the same
error as David, since his reply is a non sequitur.
--

Bob C.

"Evidence confirming an observation is
evidence that the observation is wrong."
                          - McNameless


 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 4 2012, 1:20 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Wed, 04 Jul 2012 10:20:51 -0700
Local: Wed, Jul 4 2012 1:20 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On 7/4/2012 10:11 AM, Bob Casanova wrote:

It's completely a _non sequitur_, but he's been doing it for years.

 
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:13 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 13:13:45 -0400
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:13 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

    He has produced no argument at all Goober. Not a single example to back up
his claim.

 
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:13 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 13:13:55 -0400
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:13 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

On Tue, 03 Jul 2012 20:54:08 -0700, Goo wrote:
>On 7/3/2012 8:24 PM, Olrik wrote:
>> Le 2012-07-03 12:42, dh@. a écrit :
>>> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert
>>> <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
>>> wrote:

>>>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>>>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

>> I want pigs to lead a stupendously happy life until they become bacon.

>That's good.  

    If it's "good" then why are you maniacally opposed to people having
appreciation for when millions of livestock animals experience decent lives of
positive value, Goo?

>Just don't make the mistake of thinking that if they do,
>it justifies eating them.  It doesn't.  

    For one thing you don't know whether it "does" or not Goob, and for another
only an eliminationist has reason to oppose giving the lives of livestock as
much or more consideration than their deaths. Olrik doesn't appear to be an
eliminationist and also doesn't appear to be opposed to taking the animals'
lives into consideration.

>The justification has to come
>from elsewhere.

    Humans have as much justification to kill other animals as other animals
have to kill humans and other animals Goo. Some people are capable of moving on
beyond that point and actually consider the animals themselves and what's good
and bad for them. Others of you only want to consider bad things because and
only because considering positive aspects for millions of livestock animals
works against the elimination objective.

 
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:14 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 13:14:04 -0400
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:14 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

On Tue, 03 Jul 2012 23:24:20 -0400, Olrik <olrik...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>Le 2012-07-03 12:42, dh@. a écrit :
>> On Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:50:12 -0700 (PDT), Rupert <rupertmccal...@yahoo.com>
>> wrote:

>>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

>I want pigs to lead a stupendously happy life until they become bacon.

    Pigs are sort of a sad case and unfortunately I don't believe many of them
have much positive value to their lives. They live on concrete and don't get to
root and search for food, which is a strong instinct in them. They do get to
satisfy that to some degree by nosing around in their feed though. Boredom is a
big factor for pigs because they are smart being omnivores, so they have
stronger urges to do something than grazing beasts who are content to just stand
around and eat, or lie down and chew cud. They also tend to be aggressive making
things hard on each other.

    On a happier note as I've mentioned to these eliminationists in aaev, many
livestock animals do appear to live decent lives of positive value...pretty much
all of them except caged commercial laying hens and maybe most pigs, imo. Most
dairy cows seem to have good lives, though veal tend to get a bad time of it.
Most beef cattle seem to have decent lives, spending the first several months
nursing from and then grazing with their mothers. Later when they're sent to the
feel lots they get to eat a lot of grain, which is what cattle like to do most
of all. Broiler chickens seem to have decent lives in general, though short, and
their parents are kept in cage free houses and live for a couple of years. The
parents of commercial laying hens are also kept cage free because cages make for
poor breeding results, but unfortunately most commercial laying hens in the US
are kept in cages which are imo very much overly restrictive for any type
creature, as well as encouraging to a horrible type of violence and suffering. I
encourage you to buy cage free eggs, free range or not doesn't really matter,
but cage free of any sort works against the horrible cage method of commercial
egg production. I'm certainly not the only egg consumer opposed to it either.
Some places in Europe have made it illegal to use the cage method, and there's
no doubt in my mind it was done for good reason. I would like to see it ended in
the US voluntarily, but that could not happen unless enough consumers become
opposed to the cage method and pay the extra price for cage free. That's what I
do, and again I encourage you to buy them in oppositition to the cage method.
They're more expensive then cage eggs--sometimes twice as much--but to me it's
worth it to spend that little bit of extra money against those damn horrible
cages.


 
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:14 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 13:14:14 -0400
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:14 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

    Rupert believes that almost all livestock live terrible lives which are of
negative value to the animals. Sometimes he seems to believe that some grass
raised cattle might possibly experience lives which are of positive value to
them, but other times he appears to believe no livestock live lives of positive
value. BTW he can't comprehend the meaning of lives of positive value and can
only think of it as "good", even though I've explained to him that life can be
of positive value to a being without actually being "good".

    I believe most livestock animals do experience decent lives of positive
value, but that probably most caged commercial laying hens do not. Also I don't
know enough about how pigs are raised to have a real belief about them, but
suspect that a high percentage of them have lives which are overall of negative
value. Most cattle and possibly even most veal experience lives of positive
value imo.

    Goo doesn't believe any animals benefit from living and it's all the same to
him regardless of the quality of their lives:

"it is not "better" that the animal exist, no matter
its quality of live" - Goo

"It is not "better" in any moral way, and not in *any* way
at all to the animal itself, that the animal exists." - Goo

"It is not "good" for the animals that they exist, no matter
how pleasant the condition of their existence." - Goo

"It is not "good for them" to exist, no matter how pleasant
the existence." - Goo

"Life "justifying" death is the stupidest goddamned thing you
ever wrote." - Goo

"NO livestock benefit from being farmed." - Goo

"No farm animals benefit from farming." - Goo

"There is nothing to "appreciate" about the livestock "getting
to experience life" - Goo

"Shut the fuck up about "consideration" for "their lives"" - Goo

""Getting to experience life" has no significance." - Goo

"the "getting to experience life" deserves NO moral
consideration, and is given none; the deliberate killing
of animals for use by humans DOES deserve moral
consideration, and gets it." - Goo

""giving them life" does NOT mitigate the wrongness of
their deaths" - Goo

"Causing animals to be born and "get to experience life"
(in Fuckwit's wretched prose) is no mitigation at all for
killing them." - Goo

"You consider that it "got to experience life" to be some kind
of mitigation of the evil of killing it." - Goo

"The meaningless fact-lette that farm animals "get to
experience life" deserves no consideration when asking
whether or not it is moral to kill them.  Zero." - Goo

"the nutritionally unnecessary choice deliberately to kill an animal
ALWAYS causes a moral harm greater in magnitude than . . . the
moral "benefit" realized by the animal in existing at all" - Goo

"the moral harm caused by killing them is greater in magnitude
than ANY benefit they might derive from "decent lives" - Goo

"no matter how "decent" the conditions are, the deliberate killing
of the animals erases all of it." - Goo

"When considering your food choices ethically, assign
ZERO weight to the morally empty fact that choosing to
eat meat causes animals to be bred into existence." - Goo

"one MUST conclude that not raising them in the first place is the
ethically superior choice." - Goo

"The opportunity for potential livestock to "get to
experience life" deserves *NO* moral consideration
whatever, and certainly cannot be used to justify the
breeding of livestock" - Goo

"The meaningless fact-lette that farm animals "get
to experience life" deserves no consideration when
asking whether or not it is moral to kill them.  Zero." - Goo

"It is completely UNIMPORTANT, morally, that "billions
of animals" at any point "get to experience life."
ZERO importance to it." - Goo


 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:31 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 10:31:40 -0700
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:31 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Fuckwit David Harrison, convicted felon aka Bumbledork the Clown,
attempted to bullshit:

>>>> On Jul 2, 9:31 am, Delvin Benet <D...@nbc.nýt> wrote:
>>>>> There is nothing inherently unethical about eating meat.

>>>> Modern meat production inflicts considerable suffering on animals.

>>>     What sort of suffering do you think it inflicts to the point that you feel
>>> the animals' lives are not worth living to the animals?

>> The animals lives have no moral meaning.  If the animals never exist and therefore never "get to experience life", that has no meaning.

>      He has produced

You have produced no argument at all showing that the animals' lives
have meaning.

 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:33 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 10:33:16 -0700
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:33 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Bumbledork the idiot clown and cousin-fucking redneck lied:

It doesn't.  That has been proved conclusively.

>> The justification has to comefrom elsewhere.

>      Humans have as much justification to kill other animals as other animals
> have to kill humans and

Show it.

 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 1:34 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 10:34:28 -0700
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 1:34 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Fuckwit David Harrison admitted he has no concern for animal welfare:


 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 5 2012, 6:39 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Thu, 05 Jul 2012 15:39:22 -0700
Local: Thurs, Jul 5 2012 6:39 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On 7/5/2012 10:14 AM, dh@. wrote:

How do you know he doesn't believe they live terrible lives of positive
value?  Or wonderful, pleasant lives of negative value?

You stupid fucking redneck douchebag:  a terrible life is, by
definition, a life of [gag] "negative value"; and a wonderful, pleasant
life is, by definition, a life of [retch] "positive value".

You're being redundant, you stupid fuck:

    "decent lives" *EQUALS* "positive value"
    "terrible lives" *EQLAUS* "negative value"

You stupid, idiotic, plodding redneck fuck.

>      I believe most livestock animals do experience decent lives of positive
> value

    1.  You don't know
    2.  You don't care

>      George Plimpton doesn't believe any animals benefit from living

They don't.  No living entity "benefits" simply from existing.
Existence, or "getting to experience life" in your wretchedly shitty
phrase, is not a benefit.  It cannot be one.

All of the below are true statements.


 
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Bob Casanova  
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 More options Jul 6 2012, 1:08 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: Bob Casanova <nos...@buzz.off>
Date: Fri, 06 Jul 2012 10:08:25 -0700
Local: Fri, Jul 6 2012 1:08 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On Thu, 05 Jul 2012 13:14:14 -0400, the following appeared
in sci.skeptic, posted by dh@.:

Maybe the reason he "can't comprehend it" is the fact that
"positive value", "good", "negative value" and "bad" are all
subjective value judgements, and as such have no intrinsic
meaning, something he appears to know and you don't. You
still conflate the related but distinct concepts of
existence and treatment, and now you've apparently added the
unknown of how the animals "feel about" all this.

--

Bob C.

"Evidence confirming an observation is
evidence that the observation is wrong."
                          - McNameless


 
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 More options Jul 10 2012, 4:02 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2012 16:02:40 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 10 2012 4:02 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

    In contrast to that I TOLD him we all must decide for ourselves which lives
seem to be of positive value and which do not, but he still couldn't get it and
afaik he still can't. BTW it's easy for me to understand that a life of positive
value still can not be "good", but it can be average without being truly good or
bad. A life of negative value can't be average though, but instead has to be
bad. That's the way I interpret it anyway. Rupert can't interpret it at all much
less appreciate distinctions between different situations like that, and it's
likely that you can't comprehend what I'm referring to in any way at all.

 
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d...@.  
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 More options Jul 10 2012, 4:05 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2012 16:05:06 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 10 2012 4:05 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

    He can't comprehend the concept of lives of either positive value or
negative value. You pretend that you can Goober, so do you think you can help
your brother Rupert to comprehend as well? No, you can't Goo. No one can because
his brain is unfit to handle the task.

...

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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 10 2012, 4:35 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2012 13:35:59 -0700
Local: Tues, Jul 10 2012 4:35 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On 7/10/2012 1:02 PM, dh@. wrote:

No.

"Getting to experience life" is of no meaning or value to animals.


 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 10 2012, 4:39 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2012 13:39:24 -0700
Local: Tues, Jul 10 2012 4:39 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Fuckwit David Harrison, cracker lighting tech at Mega Amusement, lied:

Nothing you write is beyond his comprehension.  You just write shit.

All true statements below, except for the unethically mangled ones.

The statement below is mangled from the original, and so is not a quote.

>>> "the nutritionally unnecessary choice deliberately to kill an animal
>>> ALWAYS causes a moral harm greater in magnitude than . . . the
>>> moral "benefit" realized by the animal in existing at all" - Prof. Geo. Plimpton

The statement below is mangled from the original, and so is not a quote.

>>> "the moral harm caused by killing them is greater in magnitude
>>> than ANY benefit they might derive from "decent lives" - Prof. Geo. Plimpton

The statement below is mangled from the original, and so is not a quote.

>>> "no matter how "decent" the conditions are, the deliberate killing
>>> of the animals erases all of it." - Prof. Geo. Plimpton

The statement below is mangled from the original, and so is not a quote.

>>> "When considering your food choices ethically, assign
>>> ZERO weight to the morally empty fact that choosing to
>>> eat meat causes animals to be bred into existence." - Prof. Geo. Plimpton

The statement below is mangled from the original, and so is not a quote.

...

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d...@.  
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 More options Jul 10 2012, 5:59 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: dh@.
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2012 17:59:23 -0400
Local: Tues, Jul 10 2012 5:59 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics

"the nutritionally unnecessary choice deliberately to kill an animal
ALWAYS causes a moral harm greater in magnitude than . . . the
moral "benefit" realized by the animal in existing at all" - Goo

"the moral harm caused by killing them is greater in magnitude
than ANY benefit they might derive from "decent lives" - Goo

"no matter how "decent" the conditions are, the deliberate killing
of the animals erases all of it." - Goo

"it is not "better" that the animal exist, no matter
its quality of live" - Goo

""giving them life" does NOT mitigate the wrongness of
their deaths" - Goo

"Causing animals to be born and "get to experience life"
(in Fuckwit's wretched prose) is no mitigation at all for
killing them." - Goo

"Life "justifying" death is the stupidest goddamned thing
you ever wrote." - Goo

"NO livestock benefit from being farmed." - Goo

"No farm animals benefit from farming." - Goo

"There is nothing to "appreciate" about the livestock "getting
to experience life" - Goo

"one MUST conclude that not raising them in the first place is the
ethically superior choice." - Goo


 
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George Plimpton  
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 More options Jul 11 2012, 3:30 am
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: George Plimpton <geo...@si.not>
Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2012 00:30:32 -0700
Local: Wed, Jul 11 2012 3:30 am
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
Fuckwit David Harrison, cracker lighting tech at Mega Amusement, lied:

You didn't show it.

 
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Bob Casanova  
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 More options Jul 11 2012, 1:19 pm
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, alt.agnosticism, alt.atheism, sci.skeptic
From: Bob Casanova <nos...@buzz.off>
Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2012 10:19:56 -0700
Local: Wed, Jul 11 2012 1:19 pm
Subject: Re: Dietary ethics
On Tue, 10 Jul 2012 16:02:40 -0400, the following appeared
in sci.skeptic, posted by dh@.:

You're right; my comprehension of illogic and irrationality
is sorely lacking. And you're still conflating distinct
ideas.
--

Bob C.

"Evidence confirming an observation is
evidence that the observation is wrong."
                          - McNameless


 
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