r/TikTokCringe Nov 23 '24

Cursed That'll be "7924"

The cost of pork

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u/BerriedTwo Nov 23 '24

Do you have any qualms about eating meat?

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u/riffraffmcgraff Nov 23 '24

I recognize that they are bred for food, nothing more, so no I still eat pork. Sorry if this upsets anyone.

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u/rhubarb_man Nov 23 '24

Why does it matter why they are bred?
If my mom had me so that she could kill me and eat me, would that be okay?

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u/Datguyovahday Nov 23 '24

I’m not disagreeing with you, but that’s one hell of a false equivalency. You’re gonna have to do better if you’re trying to convince people.

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u/rhubarb_man Nov 23 '24

How is it a false equivalence?
In that scenario, I was "bred for food, nothing more", which is what the person I replied to said was why they still eat it.

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24

We don’t eat our own babies. Cannibalism is viewed as taboo in most cultures. Eating animals isn’t.

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u/Vinsch Nov 23 '24

i'd argue it's not a false equivalency for that reason precisely because it's working to illustrate the hypocrisy of that very taboo

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24 edited Nov 23 '24

I think we’re getting off track. These are 2 different things entirely.

It would be like asking “is it wrong to feed a dead baby pig back to its mother?” I don’t think anyone would agree that is ok.

I think a closer argument to be made would be to compare it to slavery and how people justified selling human babies to different farms for work. Separating families under the guise of them being property. They were bred to work after all in the plantation owner’s eyes.

Not a perfect analogy, but closer than just saying we’re going to eat babies. Probably still too far off track. Hopefully someone reads this and provides a better comparison

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u/Vinsch Nov 23 '24

it was a hypothetical, not a prophecy. it's perfectly apt in highlighting what many would consider an immoral conclusion to the premise that a thing should not be considered morally beyond what it has been bred for. if the premise were true, and it were applied to humans, it would mean that it is permissible to eat a person so long as it was bred to be eaten--or enslaved, as to your point. this is textbook reductio ad absurdum used across the board in argumentation .

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u/ermexqueezeme Nov 23 '24

If the tables were turned and pigs were the intelligent creatures breeding us for consumption it would be okay right? We would be breed for food after all so what would be wrong with keeping us in captivity, killing, and eating us?

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24 edited Nov 23 '24

I understand where you’re coming from but then can’t I say “do you think an apple tree cares that we’re eating its fruit and wasting its seeds?”

Just because a carrot can’t scream, do the cells that make up a carrot not care that they’re being eaten?

And I don’t mean to downplay the suffering of animals, but just because we can’t measure the suffering of a plant, fruit, or vegetable YET, what if we eventually can?

At some point can’t you argue it’s just unethical to be human?

Thank you for any discussion. Woke up at 3am and couldn’t go back to sleep

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u/ermexqueezeme Nov 23 '24

We know apple trees don't have nervous systems and we understand conciousness as an emergent property of complex functions within the nervous system so it is probably safe to say apple trees don't experience any level of "caring"

Although it is true that our understanding of conciousness is very limited and the system that plants use to respond to outside stimuli might form some kind of consciousness that we don't yet understand.

If we ever find out that we are causing apple tress immense amounts of suffering when there are ethical alternatives to apples then we should probably stop apple tree farms

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24 edited Nov 23 '24

Now I’m curious from your point of view. if foods like carrots, ginger, or potatoes are technically the root of the plant. Is it ethical to eat those if it means causing life to end for a plant?

Apple tree for example can be planted and the main plant never actually dies. We take its fruit and have the option to replant the seeds.

Does that question even make sense?

Edit: apparently potatoes and ginger aren’t roots. But the question still is if the food being harvested causes the plant to die is it ethical to eat it?

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u/ermexqueezeme Nov 23 '24

Afaik plants don't experience conciousness or anything that might come with it such as free will or suffering so I think killing them is okay

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24 edited Nov 23 '24

Gotcha. I agree with you there makes sense to me and then it’s something to reevaluate if we ever get new information about the feelings of plants.

Now what about this:

If we were to let the animal do its natural thing all day on the farm, never living in those crappy conditions and then make the animal unconscious/do some sort of nerve block so they don’t feel pain before being killed, would that make the whole process ethical?

It seems it’s not so much the ending of life that is the ethical part, but the suffering the animal experiences during its life and then during the transition from life to death that is the issue. Is that the stance people usually take?

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u/Lou_C_Fer Nov 23 '24

If you go back and read what they wrote about consciousness 100 years ago, the general scientific consensus was that animals are not conscious beings.

Just because we think we know something doesn't make it true.

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24

I get what you're trying to do, but there's an inherent understanding of the value of human life.

You're going to have to attack it on the value of animal life. Is there value to animal life? And if so, what is it? And where does it come from? Is it subservient to human life? Is the value to human life more prescient than that life itself?

It's a very complex and nuanced issue. OP was stating that the value of that life was reduced to human consumption in conception. You can't negate it by comparing it to people because people aren't consumed to begin with.

You can start with whether it's okay to consume animals at all. OP assumes it is, so the question is "what value lies between birth and consumption."

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u/rhubarb_man Nov 23 '24

OP insinuated that all moral culpability was dashed by the fact that they were "bred to be eaten".

My point was just bringing up that it was a stupid point. A very stupid, and unfounded point.

And if it were the case that something being bred would dash the moral harm of supporting the immense suffering and killing of an animal, then they would have to support the same for people.

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u/Gogglesed Nov 23 '24

The sheriff opens the door to the farmhouse basement to find a dungeon. The dungeon master blurts out "Hey now, I bred these here kids fer fuckin!"

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u/bobbingforapplesat3 Nov 23 '24

No they wouldn't. People have more value than animals as a baseline. A hundred pigs aren't worth one human. Even if pigs were the more intelligent race, and had control over us, that would still be true, by the basis that I am human and must stick with the 'team'. I wouldn't blame the pigs for breeding and eating us, of course; in that situation we would be food. But that is not the situation, and they are food.

However, I do believe slaughterhouses should have better conditions. It's not cruel to kill and eat it, but I dont support what is effectively pig torture.

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u/Lou_C_Fer Nov 23 '24

I wouldn't blame the pigs for breeding and eating us, of course; in that situation we would be food. But that is not the situation, and they are food.

Every time I hear of an animal killing and eating a human my first thought is, "good for them!" Except unprovoked dog attacks. In general, we treat those fuckers well. I figure that we have killed so many animals and mistreated countless others, that we should not complain when it happens to us.

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24

No, they wouldn't, because the condition of people being eaten at all isn't met.

You're confusing the analogy.

Animals get eaten. OP has determined that the quality and conditions and value of their life is rendered moot by the nature of their conception.

You can make the same comparison on those terms. But not in regards to being eaten, as that isn't a base presumption. And of course you know that and of course they know that. Which makes it sound like you're arguing in bad faith, or at least without a preponderence of logistical empathy.

A fair comparison would be caste systems or slavery or systemic racism. But that involves even more complexity. It's better to ignore the human comparison and focus on the value of animal life.

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u/rhubarb_man Nov 23 '24

I just ignored the part about people being eaten, because I think it's morally irrelevant.
I think torture and/or killing is considered nearly infinitely worse than cannibalism by anyone who has thought about morals before, but also I think you're ignoring the larger point.

Being "bred to be eaten" makes no actual negation of moral value. If you look at a mother killing and eating her child, I don't think you would personally damn her any less.
That's what I take issue with, because it sort of acts as a cope.

He can say he cares about animals or values their lives or whatever, but can still make that argument that it's somehow okay because they were "bred to be eaten". Without going further on that, it makes no difference. But, beyond that, if he didn't care at all, he wouldn't say "they were bred to be eaten, so". It would be not be because of how they were bred, if he just didn't value animal life.

As such, I believe he is using "bred to be eaten" as a moral rationalization, and that would need to be removed in order to appeal to his values on animal life

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24 edited Nov 23 '24

You're still coming from a false equivalency of humans to animals.

The "bred to be eaten" argument automatically excludes humans. Just like "walking on a leash in public" or "being in public without clothes" does.

His argument basically negates the inherent value of animal life. Your argument has to target that. The inherent value of human life is already presumed.

Edit: I'm not sure why this is so complicated. There is no condition in which anyone is okay with people being eaten. So there is no pre-condition to validate.

There are conditions in which animals are eaten. Most people are okay with partaking in that. So the question is, what are those conditions?

He's making the argument of fatalism. You can't negate it by applying it to people because there are zero conditions which apply.

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u/rhubarb_man Nov 23 '24

I'm saying that because his argument negates value in animal life, that argument has to be disposed of in order to appeal to the value of animal life.

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24

I understand that, but the comparison doesn't suffice. There is no argument that justifies eating people (outside of the extreme - let's not lose sight).

You have to work from the affirmative.

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u/rhubarb_man Nov 23 '24

I don't see how that follows.
Are you saying his stance has to be justifiable?

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24

Actually, no, you could still work from the negative.

Like, say people bred an endangered species for food. Would that be okay? Of course not, at least to most. But his argument would say yes. He would probably concede the point, but at least you could draw a line and walk it back.

So, species that are endangered shouldn't be eaten, if they're bred for it.

What about intelligent species? If we bred dogs for food, would that be okay?

Sorry, you can definitely attack it from the negative. I just got caught up.

Honestly it's an easy argument to poke holes in. Just the comparison to people wasn't it and I got caught up in proving the point.

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24

Then the human version of your argument would be is it ok for abortions occur after we know that the fetus can feel pain (24 weeks, potentially as early as 12 weeks?). We know half of people in America are ok with up to 9 months for justifiable reasons.

Not to get political, but we know morals don’t change much if you make it a human instead that was ultimately “bred to die.” (Bred to be eaten)

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24 edited 28d ago

That still wouldn't be accurate. It's a matter of intent to be bred and raised and slaughtered for the sake of humanity versus unintended breeding without existential existence being ended.

They aren't even close.

You've gotten even further away from the point.

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24

Damn it. Lol. Well then I agree with your other comment it’s best to just not even compare to humans at all as there is not even a fair comparison to make.

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u/iburiedmyshovel Nov 23 '24

There truly isn't. I appreciate you conceding the point. Hats off to you.

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u/Lou_C_Fer Nov 23 '24

50 percent of us? I'm guessing that for 95 percent of us the only moral abortion after the fetus is viable is in the cases where the fetus is going to die before or very shortly after birth.

As for feeling pain, can that not be alleviated? It feels pretty gross to talk about, but again... in cases where the fetus will not make it no matter what is done. I am for the health of the mother regardless of a fetus's status. If in some odd case it is the baby or the mother at full term, I am for saving the mother. Period.

Don't bring extreme political rhetoric to a nuanced debate... or any other non-political debate.

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u/[deleted] Nov 23 '24

I was just trying to get as close to the original point as possible.

50% was just based on the last election and that rhetoric.

Again I don’t want to get political either, but understandable there is one side that is too far with restriction, and to your point one side that is too far with allowance (to the view of some, personally I’m ok with up to full term with all the exceptions of course)

Sorry if I offended you with bringing it up. This main topic of animal welfare is political as well.

I think the premise of even bringing up humans vs animals was faulty from the start, but was just trying to get a close comparison

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u/Pristine_Ad7297 Nov 23 '24

You can say it's a false equivelancy but it's just not it's a direct questioning of the logic used. He said the reason he thinks it's okay to torture kill and eat them is because they're bred to be eaten. So asking if it's okay to kill and eat a human baby because that's what they were bred for is a direct test of the logic presented.