Hi Catholic90. I am interested in your opinion on something that has puzzled me for a long time when it comes to the question of eating animals and such. You have noted that someone was trying to kid you by saying vegetarian food was better than meat, although I would maintain that’s a matter of opinion, and of course I have mine and you have yours. Both are valid in the context of taste and personal likes and dislikes. But then I noticed something that intrigued me a good deal. I noticed that your avatar is a picture of a rather plump cat. Can you tell me what makes the cat different than a pig you might have eaten for dinner, (other than the fact that the pig is often regarded as being more intelligent). Specifically, what makes one food and the other a beloved companion? My sense is that one answer people might give is that the animals are here for our pleasure or to serve us in one way or another, so we might chose to eat one and love the other one. I would not argue someone’s choice to believe that or disbelieve that, so let’s put that aside. What I would really be fascinated to know what are the determining factors in deciding which animal gets your care and love and which one gets raised in an industrial food complex to be eaten? Is it that you know one of the animals and never met the other, or is that that one is cuter in someone’s opinion, or is it cultural and a matter of where and when one was raised? Again, please take note that I am not taking sides. I just want to know if you would entertain a good recipe for cat, and if you wouldn’t, then why? According to western thought, neither of them has a soul, so does that cat look tasty, and if it doesn’t, then why?
Your friend,
Sufjon
Sufjon,
You answer most of your questions. Some of the reasons people eat cattle or pigs or chickens and not their cats or dogs is cultural preference. Most pets are carnivores and most meat on the menu eat grain. A steady diet of dog meat risks vitamin A poisoning, but also carnivores have a very different taste. I once had chickens rasied for the pot who were fed corn and apples. They pecked away at a dead racoon and consumed it entirely. They were not edible as a result.
People keep working animals that turn into pets for various reasons, companionship, help in herding livestock, defense from predators. Cats catch rodents in homes. Usually people share the meat from non-carnivores, whether that is from a herd or hunting with the animals that assist them and with whom they develop bonds from working together.
People become attached to the animals they are close to that they do not eat. I have friends whose children raise lambs or pigs for 4H club projects. They don’t want to eat them, because they developed some affection for them and feel a personal attachment having pampered them daily since they were born. The same animal in a field herd is different. It might be just as cute, but there is no personal connection.
The further away people get from the original reason they kept certain animals that were useful to them, but the only reason they have for keeping pets is to enjoy their company, the more difficult it is to explain or understand why one animal is viewed as a friend and another as a meal.
But it makes perfect sense that if you ride a horse every day, or it pulls your wagon to market that some bond between human and animal develops and we do not like the idea of eating companions even if they might taste good.
Outside my window there are seven deer. I don’t care to shoot them and eat them, because I have plenty to eat and my vegetable garden is fenced. I enjoy looking at them. If my family needed food to eat it would be different. There is also a large flock of turkeys that probably would be very tasty, but I don’t need them, because I have plenty of garden vegetables, locally raised beef, lamb and pork in the freezer along with fish from the ocean and nearby rivers.
I have Catholic and non-Catholic friends who are vegetarians for one reason or another. If they come to our home for a meal I try to accomodate their preferences. The Catholic friends are also flexible, preferring to not eat meat, but if that is what is put in front of them they will eat some to not offend their host. From the beginning of Christianity according to the Apostle Paul some Christians ate meat and others did not. The Church has always left the decision to the individual saying one practice is no better than another spiritually.
That does not stop the debate however, as we see here.