The alternate YT frontends on my PC stopped working for a while and I couldn't get my adblocker to work on YT so I just endured the ads for a while, and while really all the ads are profoundly annoying, this one annoyed me especially.

Transcript in Norwegian

Kvinne: Hanen eller egget? Nå kan vi faktisk velge.

Fortellerstemme: Hvert år har millioner av hanekyllinger blitt avlivet i Norge, fordi de ikke kan legge egg. Nå kan hanekyllingeggene plukkes ut lenge før de klekkes, med en ny teknologi som gjør det mulig å se kjønnet etter at egget er befruktet.

Kvinne: For det skal alltid være godt å velge [merke].

Liten tekst nederst på skjermen: Gjelder alle [merke]-egg fra 2025.

Own translation

Woman: The rooster or the egg? We can actually choose now.

Narrator: Every year, millions of cockerels have been euthanized in Norway because they cannot lay eggs. Now, cockerel eggs can be plucked out long before they hatch, using a new technology that makes it possible to see the sex after the egg is fertilized.

Woman: Because it should always be good to choose [brand].

Small text at the bottom of the screen: Applies to all [brand] eggs starting 2025.


The fucking audacity of making an ad where you just straight-up say your business savagely murders millions of baby animals a year and is still murdering baby animals at an industrial scale literally at the present moment, only to then act like this is the brand you should choose if you care about animal welfare — because "hey, at least they're gonna stop savagely murdering millions of baby animals In A Few Months."

Sexing unhatched eggs improves their profit margins. This brand was perfectly fine with mass murder for years, there's absolutely nothing to indicate that anything has fundamentally changed about them. There is no good egg brand to choose if you care about animal welfare because the industry is fundamentally exploitative of animals. Why the fuck would an egg brand even attempt to pull an animal welfare angle in its advertising‽ Why the fuck would the actress and the narrator and the scriptwriter and the cinematographer and the sound designer and the 3D animator and the VFX guy and the director and whoever else, think that this ad would do anything other than make people question whether they should eat eggs at all‽

Holy Hell I need to become a vegan like yesterday, this shit is fuuuucked.

  • dat_math [they/them]
    ·
    1 month ago

    Holy Hell I need to become a vegan like yesterday, this shit is fuuuucked.

    To you and anybody else reading this, I was feeling the same thing not very long ago. It's almost surely much easier than you think to be a vegan and it feels so much better.

    Please message me or make a post if you want recipe recommendations or have questions about veganism

      • dat_math [they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        Sure, though I'm going to omit a number of details and drastically simplify things.

        I stopped eating meat very early in the pandemic because I could no longer intellectualize my way around the cognitive dissonance of having the contents of the IPCC reports/summaries in my head and the taste of the meat in my mouth. This was the a fairly easy transition because I like cooking and I was already eating lots of food with beans in it. I spent some time shamefully addicted to cheese, kinda-half-thinking that the vegans who bullied me on this site (and for my pizzaposting in the old sub) were correct but (because of a spiritual and intellectual laziness that I'm working really hard on) I refused to properly educate myself about why they were right. Around 2021 a good friend went vegan after a series of acid trips in which much of their spirituality and moral philosophy reoriented. I'm most grateful that they were willing to patiently bully me into confronting my own hypocrisy and accepting the discomfort in that kind of introspection. Once I did that in a serious way, it became undeniably clear that my convictions that all humans have the right to clean air, water, sustenance, shelter, medicine, education/information, and the complete product of their labor is really a corollary to a more general principal guaranteeing these kinds of rights to all living beings.

        Actions/outcomes that helped push me in this direction:

        -learning biology, chemistry, neuroscience, and maths

        -taking lots of LSD, mushrooms, and some DMT over a period of years (I think this has made it easier to keep my mind open even when subconscious psychological machinery would reflexively close it to prevent discomfort and in tandem with the contemplation I've done on these substances has inculcated a powerful disgust for delf-deception, hypocritical thought)

        -hiking and learning about wilderness/conservation

        -seeing how hard the US national park service works mules and horses used to move supplies and do infrastructure maintenance in incredibly hazardous positions where a small misstep by a different animal that they're tied to could cause them to land a hoof wrong around a sharp chunk of rebar sticking up out of a poorly-maintained trail step/berm just a few minutes after talking about the negative impacts of motorboats and helicopters on the local wildlife

        -practicing cooking (especially beans in a pressure cooker) as often as I could

  • pooh [she/her, love/loves]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    geordi-no Egg ads that sell eggs produced in factory farms

    geordi-yes Egg ads that sell programmer socks and blahajs

  • kristina [she/her]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    Inv.nadeko.net seems to work, ublock on firefox works for YouTube for me too

    • Claymore@lemm.ee
      ·
      1 month ago

      uBlock Origin on Firefox is my secret sauce, makes most of the internet far more enjoyable.

      Just the other day, I boggled some kids mind because he had never even heard of the concept of blocking advertisements. It's always suprising to realise that most people simply endure the advertisements.

    • Erika3sis [she/her, xe/xem]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 month ago

      Look at that, I thought something was wrong with uBlock because I kept getting those anti-adblock messages, but I guess that's been fixed now. That Invidious instance also seems to work for me.

  • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 month ago
    Original, in which I very poorly frame the argument of 'it's more than just the fact of killing'

    If, for the sake of a conservative estimate, a bird in the wild only lives for one main nesting cycle and lays 6 eggs, that gives you an R of 3. Either we would be inundated with birds, or about two-thirds of those bird eggs, independent of any human intervention, would meet a sticky end before reaching maturity.

    The egg industry is very cruel, but we shouldn't pretend that chicks living outside it have a secure existence.

    .

    There are many better dimensions to characterize the inhumane reality of animal agriculture as we know it.

    • laziestflagellant [they/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      Boss, the animals in the egg industry are bred to the point that their rate of egg laying leeches the calcium from their bones and causes numerous health issues and a low quality of life even in the best case captivity, much less factory farming.

      You're basically pointing at designer pugs who can't sleep from sleep apnea from blocked airways and saying 'well wolves suffer in the wild too yknow?'

      • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
        ·
        1 month ago

        If someone's argument was limited to saying "they die prematurely" it would be lacking. OP only mentioned "savagely murdering"... but I should limit how much of a debatebro-l I do.

        • dat_math [they/them]
          ·
          1 month ago

          OP only mentioned "savagely murdering"

          Do you know what happens to male chicks?

          • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
            ·
            1 month ago

            Yes, they're dumped in a grinder and literally shredded. AFAIK there's no specification to the species, let alone any kind of consideration for well-being.

            If I specifically had the choice of how I was terminated, I don't know if I'd choose being eaten alive by a predator over that.

            The argument of viciousness puts us against "nature". The argument of torture and exploitation does not.

            • dat_math [they/them]
              ·
              edit-2
              1 month ago

              The argument of viciousness puts us against "nature". The argument of torture and exploitation does not.

              Do you not see humanity breeding chicks into existence solely to be shredded to bits as fundamentally different from having the bad luck of being eaten by a predator?

              If I specifically had the choice of how I was terminated, I don't know if I'd choose being eaten alive by a predator over that.

              Why are you arguing as though being eaten alive by a predator is the only alternative?

              • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
                ·
                1 month ago

                That's a good point; I considered whether a chicken could understand the difference between being shredded and being hunted, and I suspect that they would prefer the slower death if there was a chance of survival. But that's more of a quality of life issue than a "die or not die" issue.

                The moral stance of "you shouldn't have animals that have no life other than the bare minimum in order to be consumed by a human or another animal" is stronger than the stance of "animals shouldn't be killed in large numbers".

                • Erika3sis [she/her, xe/xem]
                  hexagon
                  ·
                  1 month ago

                  The thing is that the chicks being killed by the millions within hours of hatching, and the animals having no life aside from the bare minimum needed to satisfy human greed, are two sides of the same coin. I pointed out that the animals are killed young and by the millions, because rhetorically that evokes cold, systematic, industrial extermination, and is furthermore the phrasing actually used in the ad. That my problem is not simply with the quantity of animals killed, or the age at which they die, but in fact rather with the entirety of the industry, should've been obvious from the fact that I wrote, "There is no good egg brand to choose if you care about animal welfare because the industry is fundamentally exploitative of animals" — "fundamentally" meaning in this context "regardless of whether they cull chicks or not"

                  So my moral stance is not "animals should not be killed young and/or in large numbers, i tochka" — my moral stance is that human beings do not need to kill or assault animals in order to survive, human beings are in fact capable of empathy and morality, and so if we see ourselves constructing a system of industrialized exploitation that murders baby animals by the millions (really, billions), then we should be able to say that this is a cruel and entirely unnecessary affair and that something has gone terribly wrong with the world that we could ever reach such a point. My moral stance is that there is a straight line from deciding that it is OK to immediately kill most all the male or unhealthy chicks on the basis of improving profit margins, to declaring that entire groups of human beings are "useless eaters" who deserve extermination.

                  That is what makes chick culling savagery, but not other animals' predation of chicks in the wild. I'm not going to pretend to know what's going on inside a chicken's head, but what I will say is that when our species has built a machine of death of Biblical proportions fine-tuned to be as efficient in its one goal as possible, that this is representative of an exploitative hierarchy between humans and other animals. I would in fact not see it that humans would ensure that every single chick in the wild makes it to maturity, because if humans could and would do this, it would mean that the hierarchy between humans and animals has not actually been abolished — we would've simply replaced the commodity we get from them.

    • ButtBidet [he/him]
      ·
      1 month ago

      They get to run around and not live in a tiny cage. They don't spend their entire existence in a feces filled warehouse with a thousand other hens. Their male chicks don't die by default.

      • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
        ·
        1 month ago

        This is a more compelling rationale than "they die en masse". It takes no effort to prevent an animal from living a life of deprivation and torture, compared to preventing an animal from dying as a juvenile.

        • dat_math [they/them]
          ·
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          It takes no effort to prevent an animal from living a life of deprivation and torture, compared to preventing an animal from dying as a juvenile.

          Unfortunately, in our economic system, I have to eat pounds upon pounds of seitan to offset the most minute fraction of needless animal deprivation, torture, and premature death

            • dat_math [they/them]
              ·
              1 month ago

              oh for sure that was not the unfortunate part _

              I recently discovered I can just mix miso into my seitan mixtures with a bit of extra water to compensate and it's INCREDIBLE

    • Erika3sis [she/her, xe/xem]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 month ago

      Sorry, I don't want to misinterpret you, so I just want to be certain that you really are trying to say that culling chicks is a perfectly fine practice because most chicks would die in the wild "anyways", before I burst a blood vessel.