The video is to prove a point really fast, but, cows actually do only eat proteins. They have three stomachs that they use to feed grass to bacterial colonies, which they then pull into their fourth stomach to eat, with any of the grass that's left un-eaten by the bacteria being shit straight out without being processed any further. They don't eat the grass, the grass is there to feed what they do eat, which is supplemented by eating any large animal small enough to fit in their mouth. I read a study once that almost all cows when dissected had at least 1 animal in their digestive system at a time.

The notion that cows are good peaceful harmless herbivores who eat nothing but grass is nonsense. Here's a video of a cow eating the corpse of a donkey. Of note: there's grass right next to the body. And it isn't just a result of cows being fucked up by human domestication, wild deer (who you cannot blame on humans malnourishing it or contaminating its feed or whatever) do it too.

constructing an elaborate worldview out of a kindergarten level understanding of biology and then getting extremely smug about it annoys me relentlessly. Cows would eat you if they had the chance

  • volkvulture [none/use name]
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    Yes, I am here discussing in good faith

    You attempted to snidely dismiss me when I tried to bring up these ethical arguments from a critical perspective

    I don't know what your beliefs are, true, and I said as much when I pointed out how we're stuck quibbling& deflecting here because you seem unwilling to discuss in good faith

    I just know that you lashed out when I suggested that many animals probably have an "animal" ethics & decision-making calculus based specifically within the confines of their own evolutionary & ecological/social development

    • crispyhexagon [none/use name]
      ·
      4 years ago

      no.

      you’re hand-waving here, and trying to turn near-religious dogma& self-certitude into an actual “social cause”.

      once you said this, you were "snidely dismissing" anything i had to say. that is not good faith, and that is the point at which i stopped giving any shits about this conversation.

      btfo :LIB:

      • volkvulture [none/use name]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        you tried to be dismissive & disregarded me in bad faith in your comment immediately before the one you just quoted, I was only mirroring your temperament

        you fundamentally misrepresented what I said, and then attacked that instead... pretty unconvincing

        • crispyhexagon [none/use name]
          ·
          4 years ago

          no. i didnt.

          now, you could say i was rude in pointing out that your reply to my first comment was almost entirely nonsensical drivel, but it was not "overemotional" or in bad faith.

          i pointed out that the entire preposed argument was based on a faulty framework that made everything following irrelevant, because that is the case.

          • volkvulture [none/use name]
            ·
            4 years ago

            Yes, you were definitely responding in bad faith, and continued to take this name-calling & dismissive approach in every subsequent response you made

            I also said that if concern for meat consumption by others is based on a faulty framework of unevenly applied "human ethics" to animals, without any real recognition of animal ethics & social behavior, then it borders on dogma & you keep going out of your way to prove this

            I will disengage if we can stop responding to one another here

            • crispyhexagon [none/use name]
              ·
              4 years ago

              waaah i dont like it when people respond in bad faith after i did a badfaith waaaaaah

              get over it.

              animal ethics

              not a thing. animals do not have ethics.

              feel free to fuck off at anytime tho, idgaf

              • volkvulture [none/use name]
                ·
                4 years ago

                animal ethics is one of the most rich areas of philosophical & legal and biological scientific understanding

                animals certainly have social & ecological considerations & their decisions & behaviors are moderated in many ways, genetically & environmentally & between individuals, that promote certain adaptations and social frameworks over others

                I will no longer respond when I stop receiving these notifications

                • KrasMazovThought [comrade/them]
                  ·
                  4 years ago

                  Assuming animals did have their own "ethics" in a way that suggests an internal evaluation of right or wrong, it would not necessarily follow that those ethics would mirror humanity's, for a huge number of reasons.

                  If perception, group dynamics, breeding habits, parent-offspring-sibling relationships, level and kind of intelligence, environment, diet, neurochemistry all vary wildly, an animals "ethics" if that is a meaningful concept could be as broadly different from ours, and thus our own standards not necessarily applicable just because it's engaged in a *kind * of ethics.

                  you can’t humanize/personify non-human animals using this ethical framework and then neglect applying that framework to animals themselves.

                  Yes, you can. In fact, we as humans even do this with members of our own species who have diminished capacity, in holding them to a different standard if their perception or affect or intellectual capability greatly differ: an individual suffering schizophrenia or pronounced intellectual disability will often receive a different prison sentence (rightly) because of their different capacity.

                  An ethical framework that precludes the eating of non-human animals does not thereby humanize or personify animals to the degree it requires of them the same moral behaviour. I do not expect the same moral decision making from a 3 year old child as an adult human. Why? Because of their level of intellectual capacity, they cannot understand the ethics of say having to repay debts or obligations.

                  I would say it should be an obvious point to begin with that a mature and complex intellect are a prerequisite for being subject to moral rules.

                  Put it much more simply: do you think animals understand human moral rules? do you think animals are capable of grasping the categorical imperative or the best calculus for maximizing happiness and minimizing suffering? If they aren't ever capable of knowing those rules, knowing it applies to them, why would we (humans) apply it to them? I know they're not capable of grasping that morality, I know that if I expected them to hold to it they would fail, they would not understand they've failed and do not care they've failed.

                  should we shame the cow or show them how much more ethical it would’ve been to not eat the baby chick?

                  No, because we don't know whether they're capable of feeling shame or whether they would understand what about this instance should cause them shame or the rationale for why this action and not others is shameful.

                  Here's an action I hope we would agree is immoral, unethical, bad: one human engaging in sex with another without the other's willingness, using overt and coercive means to procure sex. This happens all of the time in and amongst animals. Territorial violence and unprovoked aggression to the point of murder also happen all of the time in and amongst animals. It is absolutely pointless to try and get grizzly bears or bottlenose dolphins to understand not to do these things. Does it therefore follow then that it is pointless to try and get humans to understand these things are bad?

                  • volkvulture [none/use name]
                    ·
                    edit-2
                    4 years ago

                    I didn't say anything about it mirroring humanity's ethics. But even different human groups have different taboos & stigmas & sociological behavior that hardly can be said to be homogeneous, and certain practices in Papuan tribal groups would shock or concern certain people in industrial society. We can see similarities in kin selection & reciprocal altruism between species, however. Honor killings for instance also may not be "universally" acceptable, but that doesn't keep affinity groups in those areas from carrying them out.

                    Members of human society with diminished capacity are not without will & certainly not without humanity. You're talking about whether there is a conscience that animals or schizophrenics have, and that's its own issue. We're still talking about whether it's "right" or "wrong" to eat animals, not whether it's "right" or "wrong" to execute the severely mentally handicapped. Schizophrenics get executed quite often.

                    Do I think Harambe should've been killed? Not necessarily. Do I think human-eating tigers & lions in the wild should be killed? Probably. I am not saying that animals in either instance made "moral" calculations, and specifically was referring to their own conspecific circumstances & animal social behavioral contexts.

                    Animals are deserving of a very high level of ethical consideration, but not exceeding or even necessarily equal to fellow humans. You admit this when you say that animals can't make moral decisions or be held accountable juridicially for "deviations"/what humans would label as excesses in their behavior. We're already agreeing that animals don't get the same "moral" or "spiritual" acknowledgment

                    I am not saying we should get animals to understand these things. I am saying that basic & culturally imbibed ethical standards lead us to consider kinship ties & interpersonal relationships before "out-group" individuals. Animals in many contexts also behave in this way. These kinship ties & interpersonal relationships also lead us to consider animals less than other humans. Not saying this is universal or concrete or immutable, I am saying that wild animals & even domesticated animals have their own conspecific & interspecies calculations & aren't profligate killers or completely unmoored in these decisions. Animals protect their young, and herds/schools protect one another from predators, etc.

                    It follows that humans will still eat meat whether some people think it's wrong or morally repugnant, and it will certainly never be "illegal"... unless that's where you're wanting to go.

        • QuillQuote [they/them]
          ·
          4 years ago

          Perhaps a grillpill break would be more advisable than continuing this

          • volkvulture [none/use name]
            ·
            4 years ago

            Thank you for warning me! I will definitely stop responding when this person does

            I don't grill though

            Cooking meat at high temperatures produces cancer-causing chemicals called heterocyclic amines

            • QuillQuote [they/them]
              ·
              edit-2
              4 years ago

              Thank you for warning me! I will definitely stop responding when this person does

              That's pretty childish, cmon. This isn't a healthy or productive interaction for either of you

              • volkvulture [none/use name]
                ·
                4 years ago

                I agree! I wanted it to be productive & thought there could be some exchange of information and perspective

                Definitely don't want to be bogged down examining the tone of these arguments & just want to not have these notifications