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general woundwort's avatar

Animals don’t vote

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matthew owen's avatar

> I personally tend to equate animal welfare with farmed animal welfare, given the scale and extent of suffering in industrial farming, but not everybody sees it that way.

I'm not sure my opinion here is fully thought through, but I think there's an extent to which the scale of suffering in industrial farming is such a bottomless abyss that it's terrifying to begin to look into it. Is it cruel to carry chickens upside down by their legs? Absolutely. But to confront that is to accept the reality that these chickens are living creatures that we have some moral obligation towards, and then how do you live with everything else that we put them through in pursuit of cheap eggs? Easier just to not think about it, keep the dam closed.

I think this is why it's easier to generate outrage over things like foie gras: most people don't eat duck or goose so we can acknowledge the moral problems of foie gras without having to face unpleasant implications that naturally follow. And of course people's discomfort in the UK with the idea of eating horse, let alone dog. I suspect it's also behind why many people are more uncomfortable with the idea of eating hunted wild game (eg venison) than eating farmed meat, despite being food that I think almost all ethical frameworks would say is clearly "better" (wasn't brought into being for the purpose of being killed, lives a wild / "free range" lifestyle, in the absence of wild predators requires hunting to avoid overpopulation leading to ecological damage and then starvation, wasn't bred for unnatural but commercially valuable properties, generally has a less stressful death).

In fact if you follow this through I would suspect that there's actually a strangely inverse relationship in that the more that an animal is likely to be "ethically" raised, then (provided the consumer is familiar with the details) it actually becomes _harder_ for people to eat, because the act of caring for its wellbeing and for seeing the possibility of its existence and experience being something we care about makes it much harder to kill it.

In general cognitive dissonance is uncomfortable and people will find ways to avoid it.

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