you know what I hate about the discourse around animals? People get so caught up on whether or not doing something hurts an animal. (this came up from me looking up de-horning baby goats)
You get people who (rightfully) point out that doing a thing to an animal hurts them but say it as if that means that doing the thing is therefor wrong. And then people who (rightfully) support doing the thing but defend it by insisting that whatever it is doesn't hurt the animal -- even if they have to go so far as to claim animals can't feel pain at all ever And it's like -- no. It is good to sometimes do things to animals even though it might hurt them.
I hate the circle of nonsense that people get caught up in bc ppl accept that something hurting = abuse = bad = never do it no matter what and don't question the base assumption there.
Like yeah, de-horning a goat hurts them. So what? Giving a person a spinal tap or rabies treatment hurts too but nobody argues hospitals should stop doing them. They're medical treatments that are done bc the suffering the treatment causes is worth the long-term benefits -- and so is goat de-horning since it makes it harder for the goats to get themselves snagged on shit & hurting themselves in the process, not to mention the safety benefit to those around them.
Sometimes taking care of things requires hurting them. It's just a fact of life. There's no point denying that & it bothers me that radically mis-applied harm reduction theory has distorted the discourse so much.
& since we're here, trans rights are human rights, veganism is a lib psyop & circumcision is not a big deal.
goats wouldn't need their horns trimmed if they were able to live the way nature intended instead of being crammed together until they're "taken care of" clean through the jugular
okay? I guess cats & dogs wouldnt need to be spayed if we just put them down instead too. Not really much of a constructive argument. Unless you're implying pet goats on small farms don't experience benefits from being de-horned, in which case, pet goats on small farm experience the benefits from being de-horned too. The only goats that don't are the ones who live out on a mountaintop with no fences or structures around