• reric88🧩
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    31 year ago

    Then that’s not a good reason. “Because it’s good” doesn’t justify the kill. For survival? Sure, I’d give that a pass, even though I’d defend myself. I would understand the situation. And people have done this.

    If you have this “no-kill” stance for animals, you need to have it for everything, including insects. I’m not saying you don’t, because I don’t really know, but I do know that’s often overlooked or ignored.

    A life is a life.

    • NotAPenguin
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      31 year ago

      It’s literally the same argument you’re using.

      You don’t need to eat animals for survival.

      I don’t kill insects on purpose.

      Yes a life is a life and shouldn’t be wasted because you think corpses taste good.

    • @SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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      11 year ago

      A life is a life.

      Plants too are living beings. Cutting them, letting them starve without their roots, dissecting it in various parts to be sold…

      Why don’t we think about it? Are we so extremely sure plants don’t feel any type of pain, not even a much different pain that animals can’t understand?

      • reric88🧩
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        31 year ago

        We have to survive on something, and at the very least we choose the least-sentient thing we can find to eat. Plants do have a nervous system, but they don’t have a brain. Or a centralized brain, anyway.

        We don’t know if plants can feel pain, but we definitely know that plants respond to damage

        • @SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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          11 year ago

          Completely true. But it also shows how the need for anyone and anything to survive always comes from hurting something.

          Nature is, de facto, unfair. A prey will struggle against a predator, much like when something else is a “predator” to something that most of the times cannot more or respond.

          There is simply no way of not causing harm ever in all processes of producing food, especially without heavily reducing the quality of life of many humans.