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spencelo
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Vegan healthI was vegan for 10 years but for health reasons had to adopt a low carb diet and I feel immensely better for it.
gethealthymarshall.com/
veganhealth.org/
Vegan healthI was vegan for 10 years but for health reasons had to adopt a low carb diet and I feel immensely better for it.
You do not.i have as much right to kill and eat my animals
yes, I do. It is human nature just as it is wolf nature to kill and eat them.You do not.
I hope other Catholics will read it and seriously consider going vegan, even if only to boycott factory farming.Working link to that article I mentioned:
catholicmoraltheology.com/are-we-all-michael-vick-our-addiction-to-animal-cruelty-a-call-to-conversion/
It’s human nature to be aggressive, so I suppose it’s okay to randomly assault people on the street?yes, I do. It is human nature just as it is wolf nature to kill and eat them.
The Church would never require humans to go against their nature and designI hope other Catholics will read it and seriously consider going vegan, even if only to boycott factory farming.
Is it in the nature of humans to inflict extreme cruelty and suffering on animals for food?The Church would never require humans to go against their nature and design
:tsktsk::tsktsk::tsktsk:It’s human nature to be aggressive, so I suppose it’s okay to randomly assault people on the street?
So you are pro abortion?It’s human nature to be aggressive, so I suppose it’s okay to randomly assault people on the street?
What years of future healthy existence would they have if they were not bred at all since they would not be needed for food?I’m glad you recognize the cruelty inherent in factory farming. In the case of small farms, where animals are still raised to be killed, I still have a problem: killing them deprives them of years of future pleasant experiences, which outweigh any human interests gained (if any) in a few tasty meals. I explain in more detail here: animalblawg.wordpress.com/2012/09/11/whats-wrong-with-happy-meat/
It is human nature and design to eat meat. We traditional kill it before we eat it.Is it in the nature of humans to inflict extreme cruelty and suffering on animals for food?
Please explain where the article goes wrong: catholicmoraltheology.com/are-we-all-michael-vick-our-addiction-to-animal-cruelty-a-call-to-conversion/
Or maybe they could support their local beef, pig, or chicken farmer.I hope other Catholics will read it and seriously consider going vegan, even if only to boycott factory farming.
Then they shouldn’t be bred into existence, just like the humans in my breeding program hypothetical.What years of future healthy existence would they have if they were not bred at all since they would not be needed for food?
The fact that healthy livestock exist at all is because they exist for food.
So will you stop buying factory-farmed animal products? Are you seriously committed to that?Or maybe they could support their local beef, pig, or chicken farmer.
So you are not against suffering, you are actually against animals existing at all.Then they shouldn’t be bred into existence, just like the humans in my breeding program hypothetical.
Tell me how consistent you are in your ethics: you are the one preaching.So will you stop buying factory-farmed animal products? Are you seriously committed to that?
Untrue. I was talking about raising happy animals for food – I believe it would be wrong to kill them. If you bring a dependent, vulnerable creature into existence, then you have duties to him or her, which include not harming the creature unnecessarily. So either you bring the creature into existence and don’t kill it, or you don’t bring it into existence at all.So you are not against suffering, you are actually against animals existing at all.
Not preaching - just trying to engage you in meaningful dialogue on the thread topic. Will you stop buying animal products produced by factory farms? Again, i refer you to a ***Catholic ***perspective on this: catholicmoraltheology.com/are-we-all-michael-vick-our-addiction-to-animal-cruelty-a-call-to-conversion/Tell me how consistent you are in your ethics: you are the one preaching.
Or you believe that humanely butchering it for meat is not harming it unnecessarily. But is the natural end of the livestock animal.Untrue. I was talking about raising happy animals for food – I believe it would be wrong to kill them. If you bring a dependent, vulnerable creature into existence, then you have duties to him or her, which include not harming the creature unnecessarily. So either you bring the creature into existence and don’t kill it, or you don’t bring it into existence at all.
It’s not dialogue when you don’t listen, and when you refuse to answer questions about the consistency of your arguments.Not preaching - just trying to engage you in meaningful dialogue on the thread topic. Will you stop buying animal products produced by factory farms? Again, i refer you to a ***Catholic ***perspective on this: catholicmoraltheology.com/are-we-all-michael-vick-our-addiction-to-animal-cruelty-a-call-to-conversion/