R
Ridgerunner
Guest
My most earnest question, and I should have drawn more attention to it, is what would we do with areas like the Great Plains, the Southern Plains and the various mountain areas? They would fill up with wild animals in pretty short order if raising domestic animals ceased. Those areas are mostly useless for anything other than grazing, and if they fill up with wild animals, many would be pretty unsafe for human habitation. Would we just abandon them?Not using the modern factory farming method. This is just my opinion of course, since as an agnostic I have no absolute moral measuring stick. I have not seen all kinds of factory farms, but I have seen some. Those I have seen would beat living out in some farmyard.
Is ok for fire to burn your hand? Is it ok for the winter weather to give you frostbite? So, I take it it’s acceptable to vegans for animals to eat us, but not for us to eat animals. Question answered.
The Bureau of Land Management tries to keep these populations low by curtailing their range area and with routine culls. A congressional bill passed last week that averted a proposed BLM cull that would have rounded up and slaughtered 30,000 wild horses and burros. azcentral.com/news/articles/2009/07/18/20090718wildhorses0718.html Instead, they will be sterilized, and the present adoption plan stepped up.I don’t think anybody is really going to want to adopt wild cattle for pets, nor wild hogs either. But really, if everybody became vegans, there would be no use at all for most of the great plains, the Ozarks, the Smokies and the Appalachians. So they wouldn’t really need to cull by any method, since wild animals would roam free in those areas and the people would move out. Predators, disease and injuries would cull the animals in the same way they did before people arrived in North America.