Dog meat consumption, a centuries-old practice on the Korean Peninsula, isn’t explicitly prohibited or legalized in South Korea

  • @[email protected]
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    5911 months ago

    Why does eating dog meat bother meat eaters? What’s the difference between one animal and another?

    • @[email protected]
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      3811 months ago

      The argument would be how intelligent the farmed creature is. People have a great connection with dogs due to the dog’s intelligence.

      Problem is cows and pigs are also very intelligent. The only reason people are so comfortable eating them is they aren’t pets in a home for 99% of people. Out of sight, out of mind. So people feel it’s absurd to eat dog, because they can look up from their screen and see a dog happy for their attention, practically family.

      I Guarantee if people were around a pig or a cow as a pet as often or regularly as dogs, we wouldn’t eat them.

      • @[email protected]
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        1111 months ago

        I agree. This is partly why I gave up eating meat, I saw videos of cows sleeping in someone’s lap.

      • Flying Squid
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        511 months ago

        You would think, but my wife’s cousin’s family had a pet pig and they come to family gatherings with pork-based dishes (not made from the pet).

    • BrokebackHampton
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      3011 months ago

      In order to better live with the fundamental contradiction of loving animals but also eating them, people put some animals in the “pet” box and some in the “meat source” one with a one way street between the two, in that animals that would be considered meat sources can become pets but never the other way around.

      I bet it subconsciously makes some people feel more compassionate towards animals. But it’s nothing more than a moral contradiction trying to be masked.

      It makes sense to feel some sense of apprehension or even disgust when the topic of eating dogs is brought up because it feels so geographically and culturally distant from us, but the truth is you can see this happen across the relatively small European continent. Dog meat used to be a thing in Switzerland, maybe not anymore. Nordics will be horrified to learn cute bunnies are a very culturally relevant meat source down south in the Mediterranean (traditional paella contains both rabbit and chicken meat), where they are also kept as pets. France loves their horse meat but in other places of Europe this is unheard of. And so on.

      Don’t get me wrong, I eat meat and have a couple of cats as housemates. You couldn’t pay me enough money to try cat meat. But I don’t pretend like it isn’t a fundamental contradiction, nor will you see me retching if I hear eating cats is a thing in some region/culture.

    • @[email protected]
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      2111 months ago

      I think the particular issue with the dog meat industry is that it has high amounts of cruelty, even by meat industry standards. Iirc there’s the belief involved that if the dog suffers it makes the meat taste better. So at many farms they are often tortured before death and killed in painful ways. They are also kept in horrendous conditions. Farm animals are often kept in horrendous conditions as well, but generally that’s because of a lack of regulation and most people who oppose dog meat farms also oppose the mistreatment of farm animals as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        1311 months ago

        Iirc there’s the belief involved that if the dog suffers it makes the meat taste better. So at many farms they are often tortured before death and killed in painful ways.

        Do you have any sources on this? Not doubting you, I’m just genuinely curious.

        • @NekoRiv
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          111 months ago

          I saw a couple documentaries on it. I’ll see if I can find them when I get home to link them.

      • @[email protected]
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        1011 months ago

        I was in S. Korea with the U.S. Army Reserve back in '00 and one of the last nights we were there, we went off base to this local restaurant that was basically some Korean family’s living room and they cooked food in their private kitchen. We ordered one of everything, and one of the dishes was dog (gaegogi), which had already been slaughtered, so it wasn’t like we ordered it and they had to kill it for us. Does that make it any more moral or humane on our part? No, not at all. But it was a cultural dish, and we were there for the cultural experience. I remember hearing the same as you though, that there was some cultural belief that if the dog suffered before it died, the meat tasted better (something about the adrenaline running through it’s muscles or something like that, I dunno), so they would tie the dog up by its hide legs and sear the fur off it with a blow torch while it was still alive. That’s what we heard, anyway. Was it true? I dunno.

        While I of course don’t agree with the inhumane treatment, if their culture is to eat dog, then it is. We eat beef in the U.S. and that’s horrific to Hindus, who believe cows are sacred. We don’t exactly treat beef cattle very well before we slaughter them either, for that matter. I think where eating meat is concerned, you’re either all-in or all-out. You can’t bash one culture for their cuisine and not take a deep look at your own as well and realize that they are all fucked up in their own way.

    • Hyperreality
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      11 months ago

      It bothers us because we know that dogs are relatively intelligent, often kind, feel pain and get sad. In many ways they act like children. We know this because many of us have pets or know people who have dogs as pets. Same thing for horses, to a lesser degree. This makes it harder to lie to yourself or ignore their suffering, and makes us feel bad about eating meat and the suffering that inevitably entails. If pigs, who are surprisingly intelligent, were common household pets, we’d feel bad about that too. But they aren’t, so we get to pretend that they’re stupid and don’t die in pain and in fear.

      In many ways, it’s not much different to how most of us decide to pretend that child labour or slavery no longer exist, despite regular revelations about the suffering our consumerist purchasing decisions perpetuate. Or how we’re happy to buy unnecessary nonsense, replacing perfectly good clothes, replace a functional phone with the newest shiny thing, spend money on content that we could easily do without, rather than donate to a charity that could have prevented children and innocents dying needlessly. We know deep down that we’re choosing to let people die, we pretend we don’t so we can buy some more luxuries.

      People are often evil. This is the baseline of human behaviour. We like to convince ourselves we’re not, by occasional acts of goodness.

      • @[email protected]
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        2111 months ago

        Pigs are absolutely excellent companion animals in the same way, it’s well documented. My farmer friend has one for years and he was delightful. She had chickens who had wonderful funny personalities. There’s videos of cows playing with children and sleeping in their laps.

        The logic just doesn’t make any sense. I see what you are saying, don’t get me wrong, but I just don’t get how people can “rescue” dogs and yet talk about how much they love bacon.

        • snooggums
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          411 months ago

          Social expectations. I raised a few pigs in 4H and while they were as smart as dogs, they were raised to be eaten and after being sad about my first one, the established idea that they exist to be eaten made it different than a dog who existed to protect the animals from wild predators. Heck, outside farm dogs and cats also have a different relationship than indoor dogs and cats becsuse of how everyone treated then when I was growing up.

          So while I known in my mind that dogs raised to be eaten are seen in some places like pigs are here, it is just established as a different thing socially. Kind of like how many people are averse to eating squirrels and rabbits because they see them as small animals that hang out in their yards, not a food source.

        • GunnarRunnar
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          11 months ago

          The logic absolutely makes sense. One is more familiar to an average person and other is less. It’s not that hard to grasp lol.

          Doesn’t make it any less of a double standard. Same with squids which apparently are relatively intelligent and we still eat them but for some reason dolphins are a no-go (are they endangered? Idk.).

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          My friend had a pet pig with 3 legs. When I asked why the pig only had 3 legs he said “a pig that good, you don’t eat all at once.”

        • Hyperreality
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          11 months ago

          Pigs aren’t suitable pets outside a farm. They’re too big, too strong, and far too intelligent. Remember watching a BBC documentary where they discussed how pigs are more intelligent than small children. They escape constantly exactly because they’re incredibly intelligent. Feral pigs are also dangerous and cause untold damage.

          Neither are cows. Cows are much like dogs. They like playing fetch, playing football, listening to music, cuddling, etc. But they’re far too big and strong to keep as pets for most people.

          To be clear, I’m not arguing that it’s more moral to eat a pig, dog or cow.

          I’m arguing that people are more able to lie to themselves that eating a cow or pig is less bad, because they have less experience interacting with them. Just like the kid who died mining ore in a Congolese mine, that makes it easier to ignore their suffering.

          e: here’s a short fragment from a BBC documentary about pigs:

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mza1EQ6aLdg

          Shows how 6 week old piglets can grasp how a mirror works relatively easily. Something human children take far longer to grasp.

    • Hank
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      11 months ago

      True. While I don’t think humanity doesn’t have to avoid consuming animal products as a whole it would be great if alternative protein sources were cheaply available (and ideally subsidized) so that cheap meat products become unappealing.
      Simultaneously we should have a higher standard of treatment for animals and beef in particular should be much less available because of its extensive influence on the climate.

      • @[email protected]
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        511 months ago

        Really none of it is safe. When you think about how COVID is a zoonotic infection that jumped species, breeding animals for food and the conditions they are kept in, full of feces and infections, it’s not really a surprise.

            • GunnarRunnar
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              311 months ago

              You can still provide them a good environment which is something we should focus since it’s apparent that people aren’t going to stop eating meat.

                • GunnarRunnar
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                  511 months ago

                  Is that an argument? Many also eat meat and starting to treat animals well is a step in the right direction. Perfect is the enemy of good.

            • @[email protected]
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              111 months ago

              You…do know other animals eat each other right? We’re not herbivores and never have been. You also cannot switch everyone to a plant based diet, it’s just as damaging to the planet as to much cattle.

                • @[email protected]
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                  111 months ago

                  Animals rape each other, right?

                  Yes because I forgot how animals can consent to carry on their species…the fuck does that have to do with them eating meat?

                  Did you read your own source?

                  The global food system generates GHG emissions from multiple sources. Major sources include land clearing and deforestation, which release carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrous oxide (N2O); production and use of fertilizers and other agrichemicals, which emit CO2, N2O, and methane (CH4); enteric fermentation during the production of ruminants (cows, sheep, and goats), which emits CH4; production of rice in paddies, which emits CH4; livestock manure, which emits N2O and CH4; and combustion of fossil fuels in food production and supply chains, which emits CO2. In total, global food system emissions averaged ~16 billion tonnes (Gt) CO2 equivalents year−1 from 2012 to 2017

                  It’s the 4th paragraph down??? If you think plants don’t require fertilizers, farm equipment burning fuel, and land clearing…then I’ve got a bridge to sell you.

                  We next explore how global food system GHG emissions might be reduced through five strategies that target food supply and demand: (i) globally adopting a plant-rich diet [here modeled as a diet rich in plant-based foods that contains moderate amounts of dairy, eggs, and meat, such as a Mediterranean diet or planetary health diet (15)]; (ii) adjusting global per capita caloric consumption to healthy levels; (iii) achieving high yields by closing yield gaps and improving crop genetics and agronomic practices; (iv) reducing food loss and waste by 50%; and (v) reducing the GHG intensity of foods by increasing the efficiency of production, such as by altering management regimes (e.g., precise use of nitrogen fertilizer and other inputs) or technological implementation (e.g., additives to ruminant feed).

                  So basically, fat people are a huge cause for our increase in GHG and people who waste food. Even their plant based diet, still has meat in it.

                  You’re other two links gathered data and has a ton of assumptions in it because the majority of cattle land cannot be used for crops, it’s either way to rocky, or the soil is complete shit. You do realize as well these estimates include the literal millions of acres that Australia use for free range cattle, and the same as in the USA right?

                  Global mean land used to produce 1000 kilocalories of different food products. This is measured in meters squared per 1000kcal (m² per 1000kcal).

                  So a cow which will eat straight up anything you cannot consume is going to roam in this large vast areas, and because it does so, all of a sudden it’s 1000k takes up a lot more space. Space which cannot be used for crops.

        • Hank
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          -111 months ago

          It’s also not safe to leave the house but guess what I’ll do now.

        • @[email protected]
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          211 months ago

          They were eating far less meat than we do today. They also respected animals a lot more usually, with a lot of cultural and religious rituals surrounding hunting.

          A lot of pagan religions were about “gifts of the hunt/nature” and to not squander those gifts etc. People held a lot of respect for nature in a way we don’t today with our industrial meat farming.

          • @[email protected]
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            -111 months ago

            They were eating far less meat than we do today.

            No they did not, that was basically the main source of food for thousands of years, agriculture didn’t take hold for a long ass time.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      The moral difference is the degree to which the creature can suffer and the capacity for it to flourish.

      Suffering is a subjective experience, impossible to see any but your own. I experience so it’s likely humans do, other animals are similar and different to various degrees. Do you doubt the size of the animal’s brain or the configuration of their nervous systems has something to do with their capacity to experience suffering?

      Flourishing considers the best potential life vs the worse potential life. Is it full-filling to be a cow just eating grass with the herd? Not in comparison to a human’s potential experiences. Could a pet cow have a fulfilling life with a loving owner as a pet dog? Not in all the same ways as it’s different, but perhaps it could have an equally high peak. As much as I know about a tuna fish, they won’t form as a meaningful bond with their owner - their peak life is not as high as a dog.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      This always was so strange to me.

      I would eat a dog just as I would eat a horse or cow…

      If the meat tastes awful I would understand, and I would not want to eat an animal I have an emotional bond with.

      But any other animal is fair game to me.

      I kept rats as pets, and I loved my rats and wanted no harm to come their way, but I have no problem calling the exterminator if there’s an infestation.

      Those are not my rats, so why would I care?

  • @[email protected]
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    1811 months ago

    Outlawing the dog meat industry is a step in the right direction.

    Outlawing just the dog meat industry instead of all meat industry is hypocritical.

  • @[email protected]
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    1611 months ago

    We eat bambi, its our tradition. If they want to eat yellow dog (Nureongi) I say all the power to them.

    • Flying Squid
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      11 months ago

      We generally eat Ferdinand, Wilbur and Henny Penny. Bambi isn’t usually available in stores.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        Thats why you hunt, I have more bambi available than anything else. Just costs me the rifle, the round, and getting up at “Oh God Thirty”

        Havent had wilbur yet, they say its really good.

    • @[email protected]
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      211 months ago

      Yeah, no meat eating dog lover wants to admit it’s just as cruel to raise cows and pigs for meat. We have an arbitrary definition of animals that are friends vs food. I think this whole anti dog meat thing is an interesting commentary. This is coming from a dog loving and owning meat eater.

  • @[email protected]OP
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    911 months ago

    Dog meat consumption is a centuries-old practice on the Korean Peninsula and has long been viewed as a source of stamina on hot summer days. It’s neither explicitly banned nor legalized in South Korea, but more and more people want it prohibited. There’s increasing public awareness of animal rights and worries about South Korea’s international image.

    • 1bluepixel
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      1711 months ago

      I haven’t met anyone below sixty who eats dog meat. Even if it doesn’t get banned, I’m sure the practice will die out within one generation. It’s definitely getting rarer and rarer.

      It’s sad that a fringe, outdated practice reflects poorly on the whole country. Most Koreans love dogs and they’re as horrified by the practice as Westerners are.

      • @[email protected]
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        1711 months ago

        I don’t get what’s so horrifying about eating dogs that wouldn’t be just as horrifying when applied to other animals. Why can’t we love other animals just as much as we love dogs?

        • 1bluepixel
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          1011 months ago

          I agree with you on principle. However, it shouldn’t surprise you that people draw a distinction since dogs are often pets and people develop strong emotional bonds with them, whereas very few people have interacted with pigs or cows.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 months ago

            It doesn’t surprise me, but it does disappoint me. You’d think people would apply the logic they use for dogs to other animals as well, or at least see the hypocrisy.

            • @[email protected]
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              311 months ago

              I am truly and honestly trying to wrap my head around why I feel (as a meat eater) that cows and chickens are okay to eat, but not dogs or cats. For me, I think It’s part social conditioning, part perceived intelligence of the animals, part eating habits of the animals themselves (dogs and cats are predators, cows and chickens are prey; pretty consistently, humans will eat the animals that don’t eat meat).

              As with very many things in humans, the logic doesn’t match the emotional decision. I personally don’t think there is anything morally wrong with eating meat and I understand that if I’m okay with eating cows, I should also be okay with people eating dogs. But I just can’t seem to change that opinion.

              What I absolutely can’t support is the mistreatment of animals in farming. At the very least, we can respect their lives and respect the things they provide us when we kill them.

              • 1bluepixel
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                11 months ago

                I’ve worked with pigs on an organic farm, and I’m convinced that if people in general spent any amount of time with a happy, relaxed pig, they’d swear off pork altogether. Pigs are extremely smart and sociable, and even have a sense of humor.

                That being said, I’m with you, it’s the unnecessary suffering that I can’t abide. And it’s not even a matter of intelligence; chickens are pretty dumb (though they’re a lot smarter than people credit them for), and I wouldn’t want to see one suffer either. They’re sensitive animals all the same, as any basic interaction quickly illustrates. The idea that it’s fine to torment an animal because they’re dumb is borderline inhuman to me.

              • @[email protected]
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                211 months ago

                i respect your ability to self-reflect and assess yourself rationally and logically. It’s fine to feel the way you do, as long as you’re aware that your choices may not be rooted in inherent rationality or morality of an action.

            • TheEntity
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              211 months ago

              Hypocrisy might be the most human trait out of all of them.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          Should we love mesofauna and other invertebrates as much too? Because plenty of those are killed in the process of growing vegan food.

          • @[email protected]
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            711 months ago

            Feeding animals plants is responsible for 3/4 of the agricultural land. The goal of veganism is to reduce suffering as much as possible. There is no illusion of living on earth with zero impact, the goal is a minimize the impact. We could reduce the land use to 1/4 with a plant based diet. And obviously stop the intentional killing and abusing of sentient beings.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 months ago

              Then don’t eat animals you have to feed. If you really want to reduce animal suffering as much as possible, then you should try to survive via hunting and fishing as much as possible.

              In fact, if you consider that a wild-caught fish was likely about to kill other fish, then catching a fish may be as morally necessary as flipping a switch on a runaway trolley.

              • @[email protected]
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                211 months ago

                Why is it that you insist on killing others? My plant based diet is cheaper, healthier and creates less suffering. Do you think everyone could or should just kill wild animals when they don’t need to? https://xkcd.com/1338/

                a wild-caught fish was likely about to kill other fish, then catching a fish may be as morally necessary

                The fish has no alternative and if you catch one you steal it without the need for it from other animals. Are you trying to make lions vegans? We have options, we have moral agency.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 months ago

                  Killing animals is inevitable regardless of diet. Your plant based diet requires growing crops, but tilling soil and harvesting plants kills millions or billions of invertebrates. They are so small that they escape everyone’s attention, yet they are still animals killed to make your food.

                  Fishing and hunting kills animals too, of course. But it does not require literally uprooting an ecosystem.

                  Finally, a trolley has no moral agency either. That doesn’t mean nobody should interfere with it, or even destroy it if it threatens enough other lives.

            • @[email protected]
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              111 months ago

              I would never eat dogs. I like dogs.

              More generally, I think it’s perfectly ok to have emotions, and I think it’s ok to make distinctions between those who I’m emotionally attached to and those who I’m not emotionally attached to.

              For example, I have houseplants that I nurture and I don’t want to see die, but I don’t really care if see some other plant of dying in the wild.

              On Mother’s Day, do you give every Mom a present or just your own Mom?

              • @[email protected]
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                11 months ago

                So you admit that you, and everyone else who supports the killing of animals except a particular species, purely because you personally think that particular species is ‘cute’, are being irrational and only bigoted against the practice because you like that particular species. Good to know.

                Also, that ‘Mother’s Day’ example is beyond ridiculous. I love my own mom above all else, of course, but I wouldn’t be apathetic to other moms out there being slaughtered.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 months ago

                  Well, there are children dying in parts of the world. Is it morally ok to give your children birthday gifts, take them to movies, and help them pay for college, when that money could be used to save the life of a distant child?

                  Noted vegans like Peter Singer argue that it’s not ok. If a distant child’s life is at risk, then, you must prioritize all your gifts towards helping the distant child. He uses the same kind of reasoning for his vegan arguments: a child is equivalent to a child just as a dog is equivalent to a pig.

                  I think that’s ridiculous. “Irrational” or not, humans will always prioritize those close to them, whether their own children over others or their own pet over random animals.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        Most Koreans love dogs and they’re as horrified by the practice as Westerners are.

        Do you have a source for this?

  • @[email protected]
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    711 months ago

    People just have different tolerance for how much death is caused by their own existence, your gonna kill something regardless to survive, that is life. I am not really to judge, especially a culture that I have very little interaction with.

  • sirdorius
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    11 months ago

    Thank goodness for these “animal lovers” that are okay with killing and eating more than 10 land animals per year + god knows how many sea creatures. But hey, they bought some incestuous pure breed dog from a breeder for thousands of euros so they can pretend they care.

    • @[email protected]
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      -211 months ago

      Lol, you would think vegan people would celebrate any reform in meat eating industries.

      But yup, let’s attack any imperfect movement that lessens cruelty 👍

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        It would be replaced by other meat, so in the end it doesn’t really matter. Dog meat is just as bad as pig meat, in this regard. This kind of reform is purely because we like dogs and not pigs.

        • @[email protected]
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          011 months ago

          So no progress is better than progress because progress offends the specifics of your views.

          I guess we should never shut down slaughterhouses while humans still hunt or fish too huh?

      • southsamurai
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        -111 months ago

        Eh, veganism is more a religion than a coherent and logical system of action.

        It’s emotional, not logical, in terms of the people and how they think of things. Don’t ever expect reliable consistency as regards this kind of response