S
spencelo
Guest
I don’t understand your suggestion that if we don’t draw the line at humans, then humans will consume each other. No, if we draw the line broader than humans, that means humans and other animals are within the sphere of moral consideration–their equal interests are given equal weight.Another reason why the line is drawn at people: You can end up with the human equivalent of mad cow if you consume nervous tissue of your own species. Even without any moral opposition on the basis that we are all children of God that risk would be pretty persuasive to me.
In other words, animal cruelty is wrong only if it’s wasteful? If I kicked your dog, I think you’d be rightly angry at me for harming him or her, because what I did was wrong to the dog - not just to you, the property owner.I believe animals have emotions. My dogs have convinced me of that. I love my dogs, and I think that in their own way they “love” me. But any moral outrage at the death of a dog, is to me due to it being an unnecessary waste, or the harm it causes to the humans who care for it (though I do have sympathy for animals that mate for life).
My tranquilization comment was made in response to the claim that hunting actually alleviated suffering on the hunted animals. If hunters were serious about alleviating wild-animal suffering, they could kill in far less painful ways, but they don’t.In addition, Spence, your earlier statement about tranquilizing deer and then giving them a lethal injection is actually disrespect in my opinion.
I don’t believe consuming roadkill is wrong – assuming there was not intentional infliction of death on the part of the consumer.On a side note, how do you feel about people who consume roadkill? There are many who will see a dead deer on the side of the road and use the venison in the same manner as those who hunt. Is what they are doing morally wrong as they have no active role in the killing or suffering, or is that a moral neutral?