shira
Member
That isn't a compelling argument. Why is that so?
If you want an animal/pet you don't modify the animal so it fits your life, its the opposite.
That isn't a compelling argument. Why is that so?
Declawing house cats is fine. So I'm guessing the people who are against declawing don't have a spayed or neutered cat? Because you're all saying it's horrible to the cat, well so is cutting off it's balls.
It's not logical. If I said you shouldn't keep a pet dog because I personally "felt" it was wrong and they deserved to roam free and be unshackled by human constraint, you wouldn't find that argument compelling.
If we just go by what we personally "feel," then you may say that cats shouldn't be eaten because it feels wrong to you, and someone else may say cats should be eaten because it feels okay to them. At that point, there is absolutely no way to resolve that dispute using your stated premises. You have different "feelings," and that's that.
The only possible way to bridge that gap is to use evidence, logic and reason. For example, do dogs actually live longer if allowed to roam free? Is there any real evidence that free dogs are actually happier? If not, then my personal subjective "feeling" that they should be allowed to roam free is invalid and wrong. Logic is always correct, feelings are often wrong.
Right. So why do it? The only reason seems to be monetary, and there are other ways to prevent your cat from ruining all your possessions besides declawing them. If there weren't, every pet owner would declaw their indoor cats, right?
Mumei said:And Opiate, it doesn't require a significant amount of training to do what I'm suggesting. You give a cat a scratch post, it'll scratch it. Scratching is a natural behavior, after all. If you are not home to supervise, you can crate the cat. If you cannot afford to train the cat, cannot afford to watch the cat, cannot afford to spend a bit of money on some scratch posts and a crate (in which case: How are you affording the vet bill for declawing?), why do you have a cat?
Declawing house cats is fine. So I'm guessing the people who are against declawing don't have a spayed or neutered cat? Because you're all saying it's horrible to the cat, well so is cutting off it's balls.
if you care about your furniture more than your pet then don't have a pet. don't mutilate your animals period.
It's pretty logical to cut a thieves hands off, but I thought we'd moved past that as a society. Using pure logic could lead to a lot of wrong conclusions
It is not necessarily logical, actually. Severe penalties often increase crime rates, not decrease them. For example, many of the countries which still retain the death penalty also have the highest crime rates -- surely if severe penalties reduced crime, that correlation wouldn't exist?
Secondly, I am absolutely for ethical treatment of animals, I am only asking that those treatments be applied consistently. I am not saying it's illogical to treat cats as humanely as possible; I am only saying it's not logical to insist on ethical treatment of cats but then not care at all if millions of pigs are tortured and slaughtered every week.
You can logically disagree with torturing both of them or neither of them, just not with one or the other. Logic cannot necessarily tell us what is right or wrong, but it can certainly tell us when our sense of rightness is being applied unevenly.
There's nothing reasonable about why we treat some animals better than others. It's cultural. But, again, why use someone's apathy about some animals to attack his generosity towards others? Unless you're indifferent and don't think generosity towards all animals is the ideal?That isn't logical. I mean, I understand that this may be how many people's brains operate, but it doesn't make it valid reasoning.
I would hope most people would agree with this. I guess it's just a matter of how much we can actively have a meaningful decision in, since dismantling and changing a multibillion dollar industry possible feels more futile to people (without greatly changing their habits, at least, so I guess people will always be hypocritical to a degree). It would indeed be nice if animals were consistently and universally treated humanely, though.Secondly, I am absolutely for ethical treatment of animals, I am only asking that those treatments be applied consistently. I am not saying it's illogical to treat cats as humanely as possible; I am only saying it's not logical to insist on ethical treatment of cats but then not care at all if millions of pigs are tortured and slaughtered every week.
You can logically disagree with torturing both of them or neither of them, just not with one or the other. Logic cannot necessarily tell us what is right or wrong, but it can certainly tell us when our sense of rightness is being applied unevenly.
I'm interested in exploring why people feel that traditional "pet" animals (i.e. excluding things like ravens or foxes or eagles which can be tamed but not are not necessarily domesticated) should be granted special privilege over other animals which are not.
Do you feel that the Chinese, for example, are immoral or wrong for eating dogs? Is it wrong to eat horses? If so, why? Obviously if you are a vegan then no explanation is necessary.
I'm interested in exploring why people feel that traditional "pet" animals (i.e. excluding things like ravens or foxes or eagles which can be tamed but not are not necessarily domesticated) should be granted special privilege over other animals which are not.
Do you feel that the Chinese, for example, are immoral or wrong for eating dogs? Is it wrong to eat horses? If so, why? Obviously if you are a vegan then no explanation is necessary.
Let me just make sure I have this right.It is not necessarily logical, actually. Severe penalties often increase crime rates, not decrease them. For example, many of the countries which still retain the death penalty also have the highest crime rates -- surely if severe penalties reduced crime, that correlation wouldn't exist? Second, what is the stated goal of the amputation? If the goal is to increase crime rates, then logically you may have made the right decision.
Building on that, I am absolutely for ethical treatment of animals, I am only asking that those treatments be applied consistently. I am not saying it's illogical to treat cats as humanely as possible; I am only saying it's not logical to insist on ethical treatment of cats but then not care at all if millions of pigs are tortured and slaughtered every week.
You can logically disagree with torturing both of them or neither of them, but you cannot logically contest one but not the other. Logic cannot necessarily tell us what is right or wrong, but it can certainly tell us when our sense of rightness is being applied unevenly or incoherently.
OP I have the answer to all your problems ... cat shoes ...
![]()
Not everything is logical Spock.
We don't live in a world where everything is dictated by logic.
Let me just make sure I have this right.
You are for the ethical treatment of animals, and you're attacking the inconsistency because you want people to be generous to more animals.
If yes, then we're on the same page. It's people's apathy that should be attacked, not their generosity.
That guy won't be stealing again though, not with those hands; can't deny the logic in that.It is not necessarily logical, actually. Severe penalties often increase crime rates, not decrease them. For example, many of the countries which still retain the death penalty also have the highest crime rates -- surely if severe penalties reduced crime, that correlation wouldn't exist?
Secondly, I am absolutely for ethical treatment of animals, I am only asking that those treatments be applied consistently. I am not saying it's illogical to treat cats as humanely as possible; I am only saying it's not logical to insist on ethical treatment of cats but then not care at all if millions of pigs are tortured and slaughtered every week.
You can logically disagree with torturing both of them or neither of them, just not with one or the other. Logic cannot necessarily tell us what is right or wrong, but it can certainly tell us when our sense of rightness is being applied unevenly.
When I was young, we had two cats. My parents eventually got one declawed in the front paws, not the back. The other was not decawed.
The reason for the declawing of the one (my cat, Whiskars) was he was injuring people, seemingly accidentally. When he would get in your lap, he'd knead it with his paws and would always use his claws to do so, slashing up the person he was on. Likewise when being held, when jumping off you, etc. He was a super gentle, mellow cat and very seldom ever clawed on purpose or with any kind of aggression. But everyone in the house was bleeding and scratched up daily from him.
So it was get rid of him, or declaw him. My parents went for the latter.
Thumbs up.In this particular part of the discussion ,that is what I'm arguing, yes.
I am however also arguing that the real world is pretty complicated and things which are cruel to animals may be necessary in today's world but which hopefully will be reduced over time. For example, there are still large portions of the world which cannot reasonably expect to eat vegan; in such cases, the choice is not between a salad and a hamburger, but meat or starvation. In such cases, it's far more difficult and messy to insist on animal rights. In short, I do hope we can continue to progress animal rights, but I would also add that I think animal rights are something which can and should evolve as technology and the global economy grow.
I've been around some cats that weren't assholes so I can't be 100% for declawing. That being said, 80% of cats are complete assholes so for those, declaw away.
I've been around some cats that weren't assholes so I can't be 100% for declawing. That being said, 80% of cats are complete assholes so for those, declaw away.
If you aredeclawing your catcircumcising your son, you are indeed, a dick.
You decide to get acatinto your life. This is your decision alone.
You think this gives you the right to do whatever you please with that being's life just because you "can"? No one forced you to get acatson. If they did, you can give it to a shelter or to someone who will care for it better than you do.
How can someone in their right mind put theirfurnituresaesthetics above the happiness of anotheranimaland choose amputation as a way to not have ascratch on a fucking sofacircumcised member?
They get stuffed with meds during the operation to make you think that it's okay because he didn't feel anything, but what thecatdoc may not tell you is that the nerve endings will hurt for months and that it will fuck up hisjointsnerve endings for the second part of his life, making himachenumb every time he has tojumphave sex.
I don't get how some countries can allow that, but I'm not surprised the US is one of them.
A lot ofvetsdocs in the US start to move away from the procedure and refuse to operate, but this is, after all, the land of consumerism and comfort. God forbids there is a scratch on a table or a door.
And if you're afraid of a getting harmed, grow a fucking pair or don't get acatson in the first place. If you need a fucking hug, get a plush. Acatson is not a toy.
You were born into materialism and it shows. This is fucking sick and you should be ashamed.
Declawing a cat makes it so the cat kills less animals, even if it's let outside. If you let your cats outside with claws, then you are greatly assisting its ability to kill lots (And lots) of birds, which presumably have a right to life, as well.
Because it's obviously cruel to the animal, and frequently is done for very superficial reasons; people choose to eat a hamburger instead of a salad because they like the taste better and not because they actually need the specific nutrients in a hamburger in any real way.
So if you're a vegan, obviously you object to both and your position is coherent. But if you want to make the argument that cutting off a cat's toes is cruel -- and for what are often relatively superficial reasons -- then surely you also object to eating animals -- which, in the first world, is typically done for superficial reasons, too (i.e. you just prefer the taste of meat over beans, even though beans have lots of protein too).
I am asking for logical consistency, or, alternatively, asking why those positions are different. I feel we apply different standards to cats, both because 1) they are cute, and 2) we keep them as pets and actually see them alive, unlike the cow which we never see and only see in delicious hamburger form.
I can't speak for the others, but yeah, I find that cruel. There's been whole other threads on that topic though.Are those against declawing also against circumcision?
Do you have any stats on the bird/animal deaths? Like percentage of owned cats that are inside only? I get the feeling that most of the killing is from stray cats and not from owned cats depending on what that split is. Seems that would be important when talking about the impact on the bird population.
It's pretty logical to cut a thieves hands off, but I thought we'd moved past that as a society. Using pure logic could lead to a lot of wrong conclusions
I don't get this "bird and mammal" killing business,
Are certain birds or rodents making the endangered species list because of cats?
I mean are domesticated cats that much of a threat to nature? really?
My cat killed and ate a baby rabbit a month or two ago...
and today as I opened my front door I almost, literally stepped on a (full grown) rabbit, freaked me out ( we both freaked each other out, as the rabbit ran off)
As soon as I gathered my thoughts, I started to think.... Well clearly my cat's not eating enough rabbits in the damn neighborhood.
Sorry if my tone is "cruel"
Declawing house cats is fine.
So I'm guessing the people who are against declawing don't have a spayed or neutered cat? Because you're all saying it's horrible to the cat, well so is cutting off its balls. Even the vets suggest you do it.
Can we ban users who use this shitty argument?
These strike me as reasonable concerns. It may be worth making a pro/con list to see which is better and under what circumstances.
there was a thread some months ago that revealed cats and dogs (mostly cats though) are responsible for deaths of tons of other animals. waitaminnut... your cat ate a baby rabbit recently, and this morning a full grown rabbit was waiting outside your door? i hope your cat is ready for a fight.
Are you a robot?
opiate, it is wrong to deny an animal with its own basic rights, whether it's a pet or it's livestock that you never see.
pet population control recognizes this fact, and exists in addition to it. i'm going to log out before you ban me for posting in your thread for trolling.
It's really straightforward to trim a cat's claws - declawing seems like a lazy and cruel option.
Are you a robot?
I'm interested in exploring why people feel that traditional "pet" animals (i.e. excluding things like ravens or foxes or eagles which can be tamed but not are not necessarily domesticated) should be granted special privilege over other animals which are not.
Do you feel that the Chinese, for example, are immoral or wrong for eating dogs? Is it wrong to eat horses? If so, why? Obviously if you are a vegan then no explanation is necessary.