Okay, why is that? In both cases, we are hurting animals because it is convenient for humans.
The difference, to me, and I say to me, because I realize we're moving into more of a debate of right of life than anything, is that declawing a cat deprives it of a part of its identity for the rest of its life. Slaughtering a cow, well, the cow no longer is after that. That's why I say it's moving into the realm of right of life. I'll come back to it. If a cow is born to be meat, then it should have a nice life, until the day its life is over. As such, it is actually never in pain. That's also why I feel it's disparate, because saying it's OK for us to breed livestock for food is very different, to me, from saying it's OK to deprive a life of anything of something important.
Oh yes, this ensures wonderful quality of life for farm animals. If you want more evidence on the treatment of farm animals and where you McDonalds hamburger comes from, just ask: I've only avoided posting it because it is so cruel and gruesome and I actively do not want to rely on emotional appeal to win arguments whenever possible.
My McDonald's meat comes from Norwegian farms. We have a rather high standard of care for our animals. But, sure, I'll still address this. As I said, I can only be mad at farmers if they're not following the rules and laws of care of livestock. If the video you posted is done within the law, then I need to take the fight to the law makers, not the farmers. If this is done outside of the law, then that needs to be taken to the enforcers. And I can be angry with the farmer.
Even if most feed animals were treated humanely, I don't understand why this makes it okay to slaughter them just because you'd prefer a burger patty to beans for your protein. This is precisely the argument vegetarians use, by the way.
I feel it's derailing the thread if we're down to discussing the right of life. What makes it OK for us end the life of livestock to eat? It's very different to what makes it OK to take away part of the identity of your pet for the rest of its life. The difference comes from being alive. And part the allegory of the cave. And before that bites me in the ass, the allegory of the cave falls outside of declawing, as I'd argue it's very inherent in cats to use their claws, and having always deprived them of claws won't remove their instincts.
And those cats were produced to make me happy. I don't see the difference.
I see myself as making my cats happy as much as they make me happy. That's the sort of symbiosis I'm talking about. That's why I argue we have no rights to decide what goes and what stays of body parts on our pets.
This is not logical. First, the comparison would be, "stop complaining that you're hungry. Kids are starving in Africa," since the situation you described is antonymous, not synonymous. Second, this is only a problem if you don't apply the rule consistently: it is perfectly fine to complain about hungry children in America as long as you are consistent and also complain about hungry children in Africa.
Yeah, inconsistency aside, I'm pretty sure you get the point I'm arriving at. Quality of life is very disparate of right to life, in my view. If we cannot arrive at an agreement on that, it's of course hard to see, but I'm sure your mind can at least bend my way, in which case, why I say it's disparate will come right at you. I'll see if I return to this point.
I'm just going to go ahead and guess you have no idea how the animals you eat are treated. It is the only logical way to explain how you seem to have such high esteem for the humane treatment of farm animals.
Again, Norway has very high care of its livestock. I disagree with some of it, and the fur industry has been in the news over the last couple of years. I'm vocal, and I discuss this. It's important to me that animals I eat come from a good place, but it's also important to keep the laws away from the enforcers, too. If the quality of life isn't maintained through laws, I would fight with the lawmakers. If the quality of life isn't maintained despite of laws, I would fight to get more support to the enforcers, and I would yell at the farmers, and probably not supported their products.
Virtually every pig or cow you've ever eaten was treaten like a piece of meat since the day it was born.
Yes, it's a produce of the farmers. I really, really don't expect them to treat them differently. That's not how the world works. This is why it's important with laws and enforcement agencies. A farmer won't take care of all its livestock out of the good of his heart. He want to earn a living off of his livestock. Some farmers have more compassion than others, but every single one has a healthy distance to their livestock. Knowing farmers and farms, I get it. So we need to ensure that the farmers have to conform to regulations that ensure the quality of life is as high as someone says it needs to be.
I'm thinking a bit on how to argue the disparity between quality of life and 'quality of death' - or right to life. The personal part would probably be the fact that I don't believe we'll stop eating meat any day soon. As such, the only thing I can fight for is that while they are alive and how they die is ethical. And personally I need to shout if I don't find what's ethical to be moral. That's my personal responsibility. With that at the foundation, being livestock should be better than non-existence. Being bred and fed in an ethical way, living a life that's continuously assessed to be within what gives an animal a life that's considered high quality of life, is an OK existence. If you had the capacity for it, it might be unfair, but if someone today told me, in a sort of Truman show way, that my whole life has been to produce some thoughts and ideas or something, and that I am now past my prime, and will be disposed, then I'd be bummed, but having existed for these 25 past years has been so fantastic I could hardly be mad, and I'd certainly not argue that no one should ever be born into my situation. EDIT: This is because the only option, if I closed down whatever program I was a part of, would be non-existence, that I doom all those who would come after me to.
This touches on some very intrinsic values and ideas. Is it better to exist in a miserable state than not to exist at all? Apparently, humans have differentiating opinions on the matter. This is also why I feel we're moving away from the discussion at hand, and why I feel it's disparate.