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]
    ·
    4 years ago

    We are not taking your hypothetical position for argument's sake though, that's why we're discussing this

    • KrasMazovThought [comrade/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      We are not taking your hypothetical position for argument’s sake though, that’s why we’re discussing this

      No, as I've said repeatedly I am not actually debating whether eating animal meat is good or not. I'm arguing that it does not follow that for animals to be an object of human ethical consideration animals themselves must follow this morality, in contradistinction to your statement “you can’t humanize/personify non-human animals using this ethical framework and then neglect applying that framework to animals themselves." The hypothetical only illustrates by substitution that the logical form remains valid and the assertion that the same framework must apply to animals is false.

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

        We can't humanize/personify animals and then neglect to apply that framework & expectations of moral behavior from animals themselves. You've already said that you don't personify animals, and then you also said that you don't expect animals to behave under human moral limitations. So you've agreed with the statement in your responses

        Therefore, the statement still stands

        • KrasMazovThought [comrade/them]
          ·
          4 years ago

          We can’t humanize/personify animals

          We're not.

          and then neglect to apply that framework & expectations of moral behavior from animals themselves

          Not eating animals does not require any humanizing or personifying animals.

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

            I agree we aren't

            Not eating animals does not require more than the valid personal decision to not eat animals

            • KrasMazovThought [comrade/them]
              ·
              4 years ago

              Not eating animals does not require more than the valid personal decision to not eat animals

              Right, and also refraining from eating animals as an ethical decision does not require animals following along.

                • KrasMazovThought [comrade/them]
                  ·
                  edit-2
                  4 years ago

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

                  Let's break down the ideas, bit by bit.

                  you can’t humanize/personify non-human animals

                  1.a. We don't need to humanize or personify non-human animals.

                  using this ethical framework

                  1.b. The framework here is understood to mean refraining from eating other animals.

                  and then neglect applying that framework to animals themselves

                  2) Animals must apply the framework to themselves if we are to keep the framework (1.b) of not eating animals. You then illustrate in your next sentence, (2.a) "should we shame the cow or show them how much more ethical it would’ve been to not eat the baby chick?"
                  

                  The rhetorical answer to this question is we shouldn't shame a cow for eating a chick. The effect of this is to reinforce the clauses outlined above, which connect the act of not eating the animal (1.b ) with humanizing or personifying the animal (1.a), resulting in the scenario that animals would have to follow human morality (2) as illustrated by 2.a (shaming cows for eating chicks).

                  If either of my summaries of 1.a, 1.b or 2 are incorrect readings of the points outlined, please clarify.

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

                    I am saying we don't need to humanize or personify non-human animals. That's all I've said this whole time. No, the framework is not understood to mean that, it's understood to mean the personifying & humanizing & essentializing of human-human ethical considerations within animal behaviors.

                    I said we shouldn't shame a cow for eating a chick, because I think it's silly to do so. And you agree that we shouldn't do that.

                    You've already said that you don't personify/humanize animals, and then you said that you don't apply those ethical frameworks to animals.

                    So right now, you're hand-waving & deflecting & trying to make an enormous ordeal out of agreeing with me