If you haven't, check out vegan activist Gary Yourofsky; he's very passionate and you might find it quite interesting to read his, at times, extreme arguments.
Not a veggie/vegan, but I think the choice to be vegetarian on a purely ethical basis is somewhat naive considering the atrocities committed to the dairy industry don't ebb to far away from those of the meat industry. Personally I'm still sitting on the fence with this issue.
Yes I have checked him out! He was the one to convince me to want to go vegan. Obviously I'm living with my parents at this point and am not allowed to go vegan, so when I move out 100% I will.
Reminds me of this:
(Image removed from quote.)
Interesting point there! I never thought about it like that before.
The picture does say that 'Humans are the only animals that drink the milk of other animals'. Let me elaborate - the point of the quote is that drinking milk is not necessary. And neither are the other things that were listed - flying planes, making movies and using the phone. However those things do make life a lot easier!
But how does milk make your life easier?
I'm someone who has been brought up in a culture of vegetarianism (and especially against eating beef), but in all honesty, I like the taste of meat LOL.
This is one of the most common arguments I've come across - that people like the taste of meat. But does that make it ok? Like if a human tasted human meat, and they like it, they'd probably be put in jail. Same with someone who likes the taste of dog, cat, etc. (in this country at least). What makes it different?
I see nothing wrong in eating meat from an ethical stand-point (I mean, we're not the only species to eat another?). Sure, every now and again in the news we hear stories of "inhumane slaughtering" of animals, and I'm definitely against that, but I think largely in Australia it's all done humanely.
We are most certainly not the only species to eat another species. But our human bodies are physically not meant to eat meat. Take a look at the human body.
Our intestines are long, unlike hyenas/lions which need shorter intestines to get the decomposing flesh out of their bodies quicker.
We have stomach acid that is 20 times weaker than that of a meat eater - if we were meant to consume flesh, we would have stronger stomach acids to do the job.
We do not have claws, whereas meat eaters do. Even dogs have claws and they have no need to hunt anymore after domestication.
We have well developed salivary glands, which are used to digest fruits and grains.
But as you mentioned the ethical part of it, I feel obliged to tell you that animals throughout the world, even Australia, are not killed 'humanely'. They are stunned (which does not always work all the time) (a stun is a gunshot to the head) and then they are killed in horrible ways which I shall not post here because they are too gruesome and if you would like to be informed you can go to
http://www.meat.org.
And besides, what is 'humane killing'? Is it that the animal is given a wonderful life and does not feel anything before they die?
Well here is a scenario that Gary Yourofsky used: say you met a nice man/woman at a bar. They and you have a great time, eating, drinking, etc. He/she has an awesome time and so do you. You have heaps of fun and then later in the day you meet again for dinner at your house. When he/she is not looking, you slip them a sleeping drug, and when they are unconscious you murder them brutally. Is that humane?
its been natural for a long time for humans to eat meat. before we developed agrarian societies we were mostly hunter-gatherers who would hunt animals and eat them so from an evolutionary and biological standpoint its pretty much the normal thing to do. lions eat zebras and bears eat salmon so its pretty natural all things considered for a species to eat another species.
As I mentioned above humans are not biologically meant to eat meat, you can see that from our anatomy and by comparing it to meat eaters and herbivores.
You say we were hunter gatherers before developing agrarian societies - but before that, before the whole Ice Age era, there was no need to eat meat. When the Ice Age came around, people were starving and resorted to meat. After the Ice Age, things should have gone back to normal...but they didn't, and people continue to eat meat + dairy today.
If humans are meant to eat meat, then how come when a lion eats a zebra raw it gets stronger, but when we eat a chicken raw we get salmonella poisoning?