On Thu, 5 Jul 2012 09:01:15 -0700 (PDT), "Mr.Smartypants"
<
bunghol...@lycos.com> wrote:
>On Jul 5, 9:54 am, Goo wrote:
>> On 7/5/2012 8:46 AM, Fidem Turbare, the non-existent atheist goddess wrote:
>>
>> > On Thu, 05 Jul 2012 08:14:27 -0700
>> > Goo wrote:
>> >> On 7/5/2012 7:00 AM, Arindam Banerjee wrote:
>> >>> On Jul 5, 10:44 pm, Ben Kaufman <spaXm-mXe-anXd-paXy-5000-
>> >>>
doll...@pobox.com> wrote:
>> >>>>> On Jul 4, 2:53 am, Goo wrote:
>> > [snip]
>> >>>>>> No. It has *ZERO* importance
>>
>> >>>>> The main issues are freedom and cruelty. Animals born for
>> >>>>> slaughter have no freedom - the only "benefit" they may have over
>> >>>>> wild animals is reasonably assured food and shelter for a short
>> >>>>> time.
>>
>> >>>>> Compromising freedom in any way, works to the detriment of
>> >>>>> freedom in general and is thus responsible for the chains
>> >>>>> (visible or invisible) the human race has to wear.
>>
>> >>>>> Cheers,
>> >>>>> Arindam Banerjee
>>
>> >>>> Animals don't understand the concept of freedom.
>>
>> >>> But they do understand the need to get out of enclosures, or bonds
>> >>> that restrict their movements.
>>
>> >> No, they don't. Most animals remain quite happily within enclosures.
>> >> Even a sow in farrowing crate or a gestation crate doesn't appear
>> >> distressed or unhappy.
>> > [snip]
>>
>> > That's partially true. It seems to depend partially on a combination of
>> > the nature and personality of the animal.
>>
>> > There are many animals who don't like captivity, such as cats: Ever
>> > try putting a cat in a cage (the bigger the better)? Most of them
>> > dislike this experience very much as is made obvious by the fact that
>> > not only do they make a fuss once while in the cage, they usually
>> > resist being forced into it in the first place.
>>
>> That's not always true. When I take my cats to the vet, they're very
>> unhappy going into the pet carriers to make the trip to the vet. Once
>> they're at the vet, I can barely get them out of the carriers, and once
>> the vet has finished with them, they can't wait to go back into them.
>
>You stupid prick! It's obvious that the kitties are more scared of the
>vet than the cage.
It's a wonder a person like Goo can even keep a cat alive. You had to tell
HIM about the behavior of his own cats. That's pretty pathetic. And worst of
all, it's more likely than not that the stupid Goober still doesn't get it.
>> In any case, the animals in question are domestic livestock animals
>> raised for human consumption. Cattle, pigs, sheep, poultry - none of
>> them have a big problem with being confined in anything except the most
>> restrictive enclosures.
>
>How the f*** would you know?
He would have no way of knowing. But to Goo quality of life doesn't matter
anyway, because he thinks that life has the same value to all livestock animals
regardless of the quality of the life itself. The Goober believes that animals
who have to endure a lot of suffering for whatever reasons benefit from their
existence as much as those which get to enjoy decent lives of positive value:
"no matter how "decent" the conditions are, the deliberate killing
of the animals erases all of it." - Goo
"the moral harm caused by killing them is greater in magnitude
than ANY benefit they might derive from "decent lives" - 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
"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
logically one MUST conclude that not raising them in the first place is the
ethically superior choice." - 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
"you MUST believe that it makes moral sense not to raise the
animals as the only way to prevent the harm that results from
killing them." - Goo
"It is ONLY about the invalidity and logical absurdity of the
belief that causing animals to "get to experience life" somehow
offsets any moral harm that is done in killing them." - Goo