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Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
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Snuffles  
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 More options 20 Jan 2001, 12:23
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Snuffles" <fourth.mon...@ntlworld.com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 12:24:47 -0000
Local: Sat 20 Jan 2001 12:24
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)

"Rat & Swan" <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message
news:3A692CDF.2AB1@pacbell.net...

> Dutch wrote:

> > > <snip>
> > > > The thing about the meat industry is that a lot the cruel practices
are
> > identified,
> > > > and can be and are being changed. If people make noise about them,
then the
> > industry
> > > > will be motivated to make these changes. No doubt there are also
ways to influence
> > the
> > > > amount of animal suffering in agriculture. Can they design

affordable mice-proof
> > bins?
> > > > Can tilling be made more humane? Can they kill insects and wild oats
without
> > poisoning
> > > > all the birds? Economics.

> > >   The AR side has made these points repeatedly.

> > [..]

> > I wouldn't go out and replace commercial meat with a commercial

vegetable in my diet
> > simply in an attempt to reduce suffering of animals, there is

insufficient evidence

Your choice - just do not keep trying to intimidate others into following
your unhealthy lifestyle(when followed religiously or by the book )
by promoting criminal acts against other Humans.

>  because
> I believe raising
>   and slaughtering animals for food violates
>   those animals' inherent rights.

Explain  - What "inherent" rights have animals got.

If there was such a thing as universal "rights"(or duties) animals would
respect them.
As it is animals don't respect  "rights" cannot understand them and so
haven't got any.

I believe "Rights" generally are a type of contract/understanding between at
least two parties
concerning  common resources/behavior

For the human concept of rights to work there has to be a degree of
reciprocation(give & take).
Non-human animals just do not have the capacity for this.


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Discussion subject changed to "Man is a HERBIVORE!!?" by Polly
Polly  
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 More options 20 Jan 2001, 21:10
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Polly" <o...@erinet.com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 16:08:10 -0500
Local: Sat 20 Jan 2001 21:08
Subject: Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?
Dutch <n...@email.com> wrote in message

news:t6i8nne2l5iede@news.supernews.com...

Although we know there's no literal "contract", I do like your way of
stating the fact that both humans and animals benefit from the animals'
domestication.

Polly


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Discussion subject changed to "Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)" by Polly
Polly  
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 More options 20 Jan 2001, 21:20
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Polly" <o...@erinet.com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 16:16:52 -0500
Local: Sat 20 Jan 2001 21:16
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message
news:3A692CDF.2AB1@pacbell.net...
> Dutch wrote:

> > > <snip>
> > > > The thing about the meat industry is that a lot the cruel practices
are
> > identified,
> > > > and can be and are being changed. If people make noise about them,
then the
> > industry
> > > > will be motivated to make these changes. No doubt there are also
ways to influence
> > the
> > > > amount of animal suffering in agriculture. Can they design

affordable mice-proof
> > bins?
> > > > Can tilling be made more humane? Can they kill insects and wild oats
without
> > poisoning
> > > > all the birds? Economics.

> > >   The AR side has made these points repeatedly.

> > [..]

> > I wouldn't go out and replace commercial meat with a commercial

vegetable in my diet
> > simply in an attempt to reduce suffering of animals, there is

insufficient evidence

If I understand you, then, it doesn't particularly bother you that billions
of nonfood animals are killed in the process of raising vegetables/grains,
but it does bother you that other animals (hogs, cattle, poultry, etc.) are
raised and killed specifically for food?

I would assume, then, that it isn't the killing of animals that bothers you
at all, but the fact that with food animals, *humans* are doing the raising
and are the ones benefiting from it.

Is this is indeed your opinion (as it seems to be), it's little wonder that
ARA's are often accused of having an "anti-human" attitude. Your argument
certainly sounds that way to me.

Polly


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brandon1965  
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 More options 20 Jan 2001, 23:20
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: brandon1...@my-deja.com
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 23:12:52 GMT
Local: Sat 20 Jan 2001 23:12
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
In article <t6id3asr7jo...@news.supernews.com>,
  "Dutch" <n...@email.com> wrote:
> "Rat & Swan" <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message

news:3A692CDF.2AB1@pacbell.net...

other animals, or is

> a special right that only comes into effect in relation to humans? If
the latter, you
> might consider the possibility that the right is granted by you.

  Excellent point Dutch.

 In fact all rights

> are granted, there are no "inherent rights".

  Sorry, I disagree, if it has to be granted it is a privelege not a
right. Someone telling you that you can do something before you are
allowed to do it violates the very concept of a "right". In the U.S.,
the concept of natural rights, as defined by John Locke, formed the
basis for our Declaration of Independence and it's recognition
of "inalienable rights", as well as the Bill of Rights in our
Constitution. Rights are not granted, you have them by virtue of being
human.
   Kevin

>  Even if
> >   veggie production created more absolute suffering,
> >   I could not, ethically, replace veggies with
> >   non-human animal meat, any more than I could
> >   replace veggies with flesh of slaughtered humans.

> It's a basically selfish ethic then. So's mine.

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Dutch  
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 More options 20 Jan 2001, 23:47
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Dutch" <n...@email.com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 15:46:15 -0800
Local: Sat 20 Jan 2001 23:46
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)

"WE hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they
are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness --"

"endowed by their Creator" is window dressing. Rights are granted by the government of
a country to it's citizens. These rights are revokable under various circumstances at
the whim of said government. They also depend on the total cooperation of the
surrounding population. Any person is free to transgress these rights at any time. Are
these people punished by God? Rights do not exist, period, except as implied by
current laws and customs.

[..]


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Discussion subject changed to "Man is a HERBIVORE!!?" by Dutch
Dutch  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 00:15
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Dutch" <n...@email.com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 16:14:00 -0800
Subject: Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?
"Polly" <o...@erinet.com> wrote [..]

> > Pigs and cows are domesticated animals that we create, breed and raise,
> giving them a
> > life as David says, in exchange for the use of their hides. We give them
> life. They
> > give us their lives, and our lifestyles. It's a mutually beneficial
> contract, which I
> > believe includes treating them with respect. The only contract I have with
> mice is you
> > get out of my grain and I won't kill you. Isn't that the way YOU look at
> mice? Maybe
> > we're not so different after all.

> Although we know there's no literal "contract", I do like your way of
> stating the fact that both humans and animals benefit from the animals'
> domestication.

Thanks. I am beginning to find myself quoting David.. who'da thunk???

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Discussion subject changed to "Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)" by Rat &amp; Swan
Rat & Swan  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 05:42
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 21:40:11 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 05:40
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)

Polly wrote:
> Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message

  <snip>

  It certainly "bothers" me -- just as much
  as the humans killed in in the process
  bothers me. But I can see no practical or
  ethical reason why replacing veggies with
  meat will create the sort of change which
  will encourage farmers to kill fewer of
  them.

> but it does bother you that other animals (hogs, cattle, poultry, etc.) are
> raised and killed specifically for food?

  Yes.

> I would assume, then, that it isn't the killing of animals that bothers you
> at all, but the fact that with food animals, *humans* are doing the raising
> and are the ones benefiting from it.

  It is the intentional raising and killing
  of animals by humans.

> Is this is indeed your opinion (as it seems to be), it's little wonder that
> ARA's are often accused of having an "anti-human" attitude. Your argument
> certainly sounds that way to me.

  It's not.  If I were really anti-human
  I would suggest raising humans on
  hydroponically-produced veggie diets and
  slaughtering _them_ for food. I don't.

  Rat


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Rat & Swan  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 06:13
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 22:11:19 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 06:11
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)

Dutch wrote:
> "Rat & Swan" <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message news:3A692CDF.2AB1@pacbell.net...

<snip>

   In relation to humans, because only humans
   are moral agents (as far as we know; some
   animals may be moral agents, but we don't,
   I think, know which, if any, are at this
   point.)

>the latter, you
> might consider the possibility that the right is granted by you. In fact all rights
> are granted, there are no "inherent rights".

   Ipse dixit. That is your opinion,
   no more.

>  Even if
> >   veggie production created more absolute suffering,
> >   I could not, ethically, replace veggies with
> >   non-human animal meat, any more than I could
> >   replace veggies with flesh of slaughtered humans.
> It's a basically selfish ethic then. So's mine.

  I wouldn't say it is selfish. I would say
  it is an ethical view which creates a moral
  obligation for me.

  Rat


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Rat & Swan  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 06:23
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 22:20:49 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 06:20
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)

brandon1...@my-deja.com wrote:

<snip>

> Rights are not granted, you have them by virtue of being
> human.

  I agree with the first half of your sentence,
  but not the second.

  Rat


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rick etter  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 07:00
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: rick etter <ret...@bright.net>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 01:29:40 -0500
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 06:29
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
Rat & Swan wrote:

> brandon1...@my-deja.com wrote:

> <snip>
> > Rights are not granted, you have them by virtue of being
> > human.

>   I agree with the first half of your sentence,
>   but not the second.

-----------
yeah, yeah, we know, a rat is a dog is a.... bs.

If animals have this inherent 'right' not to be eaten, why are there
prey animals?  Or are predators immoral?

--
Canoe North!
Rick Etter
http://www.bright.net/~retter

Step outside...The Graphics are Amazing!


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brandon1965  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 08:30
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: brandon1...@my-deja.com
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 08:21:18 GMT
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 08:21
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
In article <3A6A7FC1.2...@pacbell.net>,

  lab...@pacbell.net wrote:
> brandon1...@my-deja.com wrote:

> <snip>
> > Rights are not granted, you have them by virtue of being
> > human.

>   I agree with the first half of your sentence,
>   but not the second.

>   Rat

    I knew that was coming <g>. You and I have been agreeing about 50%
of the time for the past several weeks.
   Kevin


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brandon1965  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 08:40
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: brandon1...@my-deja.com
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 08:32:03 GMT
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 08:32
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
In article <t6k8sc58dj8...@news.supernews.com>,
  "Dutch" <n...@email.com> wrote:
> <brandon1...@my-deja.com> wrote in message

news:94d61h$9vj$1@nnrp1.deja.com...

    God is not a part of the equation. "Endowed by their creator" was a
reference by Jefferson to whoever or whatever an individual believed
was responsible for their existence. It was not a Christian reference
since Jefferson was not a Christian and neither were the majority of
his contemporaries. Governments cannot take away a person's rights. The
government may become tyrannical and refuse to recognize those rights,
but that in no way implies that the rights do not exist. A person may
violate another person's rights, but the government is expected, due to
the existence of the individual right that was violated, to set just
punishment for such violations. Governments do not have laws against
murder because murdering someone is harmful to the government, they
have laws against murder because murder is a violation of another
person's individual and inalienable right to life. The same holds true
for all rights, all of which are derived from one or more of the three
inalienable rights of life, liberty, and property.
   Kevin

> [..]

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http://www.deja.com/

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Polly  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 13:30
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Polly" <o...@erinet.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 08:26:57 -0500
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 13:26
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
<brandon1...@my-deja.com> wrote in message

news:94e6q3$2nt$1@nnrp1.deja.com...

What majority, and if not Christian, what were they?

> Governments cannot take away a person's rights. The
> government may become tyrannical and refuse to recognize those rights,
> but that in no way implies that the rights do not exist.
> A person may
> violate another person's rights, but the government is expected, due to
> the existence of the individual right that was violated, to set just
> punishment for such violations. Governments do not have laws against
> murder because murdering someone is harmful to the government, they
> have laws against murder because murder is a violation of another
> person's individual and inalienable right to life. The same holds true
> for all rights, all of which are derived from one or more of the three
> inalienable rights of life, liberty, and property.

I agree.

Polly


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Polly  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 13:35
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Polly" <o...@erinet.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 08:32:30 -0500
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 13:32
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message
news:3A6A83B9.42AC@pacbell.net...

"Saving" the life of or "rescuing" one or a few research animals does not
justify destroying years of research that may save the lives of many people
and many animals in the future.

Polly

(snip)


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Polly  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 13:40
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Polly" <o...@erinet.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 08:38:25 -0500
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 13:38
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message
news:3A6A763B.4A8E@pacbell.net...

This seems to contradict what you said earlier:

I believe that's pretty much what I said. Humans are doing the raising and
the killing, therefore it bothers you. If it were animals killing other
animals, it would be no big deal. It's when humans enter the equation that
it begins to bother you.

> > Is this is indeed your opinion (as it seems to be), it's little wonder
that
> > ARA's are often accused of having an "anti-human" attitude. Your
argument
> > certainly sounds that way to me.

>   It's not.  If I were really anti-human
>   I would suggest raising humans on
>   hydroponically-produced veggie diets and
>   slaughtering _them_ for food. I don't.

Being anti-human isn't limited to supporting the slaughter of humans. It
simply means you're against things that benefit humans. At least, that's my
take on it.

Polly


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Dutch  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 20:08
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Dutch" <n...@email.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 12:07:40 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 20:07
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
"Rat & Swan" <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote ...

> Dutch wrote:
 <snip>
> > >   But I am vegan because I believe raising
> > >   and slaughtering animals for food violates
> > >   those animals' inherent rights.

> > Does this inherent right of the animal also exist between it and other animals, or
is
> > a special right that only comes into effect in relation to humans?
>    In relation to humans, because only humans
>    are moral agents (as far as we know; some
>    animals may be moral agents, but we don't,
>    I think, know which, if any, are at this
>    point.)

Following that reasoning, the inherent right does not exist for that animal, except in
the specific case of it's interaction with the moral agent. Doesn't that suggest to
you that it's the moral agent that carries this imperative, since it only exists when
he is present?

> >the latter, you
> > might consider the possibility that the right is granted by you. In fact all
rights
> > are granted, there are no "inherent rights".

>    Ipse dixit. That is your opinion,
>    no more.

Logic supports it. Throughout history human societies have existed, and very few have
recognized these so-called "inherent rights". Nothing about these rights suggests they
are anything more than agreeable to the social and constitiutional environment.
Certainly in recent history, before blacks or women were recognized as "equal",
inherent rights did not apply to them.

> >  Even if
> > >   veggie production created more absolute suffering,
> > >   I could not, ethically, replace veggies with
> > >   non-human animal meat, any more than I could
> > >   replace veggies with flesh of slaughtered humans.

> > It's a basically selfish ethic then. So's mine.

>   I wouldn't say it is selfish. I would say
>   it is an ethical view which creates a moral
>   obligation for me.

Why isn't it selfish to choose a preferred diet over one that you admit causes less
suffering?

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Dutch  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 20:40
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Dutch" <n...@email.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 12:39:19 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 20:39
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
<brandon1...@my-deja.com> wrote

[..]

It doesn't matter, but if it's not god who endows rights, then how did we get them? Do
you claim that they were just sitting there (self-evident), and the founding fathers
of America finally noticed them? How do you explain that they forgot to include blacks
and women? How is it that these inherent rights are not recognized everywhere?

 >. Governments cannot take away a person's rights.

Ever hear of conscription? Ever hear of internment camps?

> The
> government may become tyrannical and refuse to recognize those rights,
> but that in no way implies that the rights do not exist.

What evidence can you produce that they exist?

 A person may

> violate another person's rights, but the government is expected, due to
> the existence of the individual right that was violated, to set just
> punishment for such violations.

But this shows that at best that these rights only imply behavior. If they were real,
no-one could violate them.

> Governments do not have laws against
> murder because murdering someone is harmful to the government, they
> have laws against murder because murder is a violation of another
> person's individual and inalienable right to life. The same holds true
> for all rights, all of which are derived from one or more of the three
> inalienable rights of life, liberty, and property.

Spoken like a true patriot Brandon, but the argument doesn't hold up. "inalienable
rights of life, liberty, and property" are basic principles of a modern democratic
society, and desirable to be sure, but there is no reason to believe that they are
inherent (coded into dna or whatever) in any way. Many societies have flourished over
the millenia without them.

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Dutch  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 20:51
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Dutch" <n...@email.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 12:44:50 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 20:44
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
"Polly" <o...@erinet.com> wrote [..]

> > Governments cannot take away a person's rights. The
> > government may become tyrannical and refuse to recognize those rights,
> > but that in no way implies that the rights do not exist.
> > A person may
> > violate another person's rights, but the government is expected, due to
> > the existence of the individual right that was violated, to set just
> > punishment for such violations. Governments do not have laws against
> > murder because murdering someone is harmful to the government, they
> > have laws against murder because murder is a violation of another
> > person's individual and inalienable right to life. The same holds true
> > for all rights, all of which are derived from one or more of the three
> > inalienable rights of life, liberty, and property.

> I agree.

I agree that democratic rights are beneficial, but that begs the original question.
Are they "inherent" or granted and enforced by governments? When there are changes,
such as in the womens' sufferage movement, did we just wake up and recognize a right
that was inherent all along or did we simply add a new one? Is there a difference?

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Dutch  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 22:25
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Dutch" <n...@email.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 14:24:41 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 22:24
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
"Rat & Swan" <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message news:3A6A7D87.60AA@pacbell.net...
> Dutch wrote:

> > "Rat & Swan" <lab...@pacbell.net> wrote in message

news:3A692CDF.2AB1@pacbell.net...

The whole idea of inherent rights collapses under any scrutiny. Also nothing inherent
in nature as I view it objectively suggests anything like the inherent right not to be
killed for food, quite the reverse, it is one's role and obligation to be, except for
the top animal in each food chain. Certainly there exists no inherent right to not be
kept in a barn and fed. What I believe is that we have the absolute right as free
moral agents to do whatever we want with animals. This is only limited by prevailing
AW laws. This is not a corrupt model, it needs refining, yes. Don't throw the baby out
with the bathwater.

Animals raised as food animals get a lot of good treatment, some bad. Take that bad
away, and... problem gone.

[..]


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Rat & Swan  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 22:53
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 14:51:03 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 22:51
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
<snip>

> I agree that democratic rights are beneficial, but that begs the original question.
> Are they "inherent" or granted and enforced by governments? When there are changes,
> such as in the womens' sufferage movement, did we just wake up and recognize a right
> that was inherent all along or did we simply add a new one? Is there a difference?

  Virtually every movement to expand protection
  and participation in the social group has been
  based on the belief that the excluded group HAD/
  HAS a right, which should be recognized by
  society and by law (in legally-based societies).
  No one that I know of has ever led a protest
  movement with the slogan" "Let's create a right
  to (do X)...or for (group X)."  It is always assumed
  that the right already exists, is inherent,
  and recognition of it is being unfairly denied
  by the power structure.  Otherwise, there would be
  no sense of legitimacy to the movement.  

  In every case I know of, those who were trying to
  expand the recognition of the existing right(s)
  argued that all those whose right(s)were already
  recognized and acknowledged had those rights on
  the basis of certain significant shared characteristics.
  Those who argued against the expanded definition of
  the class of those holding the right(s) argued that
  the significant shared characteristics must include ones
  which excluded the protesting (or protested-for) group.
  Those arguing for the excluded group argued that the
  excluding characteristics were not significant (were
  not necessary) for recognition in the class of those
  holding the inherent, already-existing, right.  The
  AR movement is continuing in this tradition, and
  the anti-AR movement is continuing in the tradition
  which denied rights to women, blacks, the poor,
  the non-noble, and gay people. That is why the
  comparison with the liberation movements for
  those groups is frequently cited by ARAs.

  What people in both camps sometimes forget is that the
  contemporary opponents of expanding the class of
  rights-holders to include such groups believed quite
  genuinely that the excluded group really didn't
  have the shared characteristics necessary to be
  included.  Their arguments sound both ridiculous
  and horribly bigoted today, but they were held
  in good faith at the time.  I have faith that some
  day in the future, the arguments against recognizing
  the rights of some non-human animals will be seen
  in the same light as the arguments against recognizing
  the full rights of women, blacks, gays, non-property-
  holders, Catholics, Jews, and so on.

  Rat


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brandon1965  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 23:30
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: brandon1...@my-deja.com
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 23:20:27 GMT
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 23:20
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
In article <3a6ae33a$0$1520$53a6a...@news.erinet.com>,
  "Polly" <o...@erinet.com> wrote:

   They were Deists Polly. You didn't think I just made up my own
religion, did you? <g>

   "The government of the United States is in no way founded upon
Christianity."  George Washington

   "Jesus Christ is a great role model for children. I have not been a
child for several decades." Thomas Jefferson

    James Madison, James Monroe, Richard Henry Lee, Harry Lee,
Alexander Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Paine, and Patrick Henry
were also Deists. Many of the lesser known Founding Fathers also
believed in Deism. Oh, there were two prominent men among our Founding
Fathers who were Christians: John Adams and Samuel Adams, our first
famous brewers.
   Kevin

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http://www.deja.com/

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Rat & Swan  
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 More options 21 Jan 2001, 23:42
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: Rat & Swan <lab...@pacbell.net>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 15:39:38 -0800
Local: Sun 21 Jan 2001 23:39
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)

Polly wrote:

<snip>

> "Saving" the life of or "rescuing" one or a few research animals does not
> justify destroying years of research that may save the lives of many people
> and many animals in the future.

  There are several falacies here.  First,
  rescuing the animal will not destroy any
  existing research; it will only prevent
  future use of that animal.  Second, this sees
  the animal only as a means, of value only
  for his/her use to humans.  That is a view I
  reject.  Third, the suffering and injustice
  to the animal exists now. The obligation to
  end that suffering and injustice exists now.
  Any future benefit is as nebulous and
  morally meaningless as the "experience of
  life" of David's future generations of doomed
  cows and pigs.

   Rat


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brandon1965  
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 More options 22 Jan 2001, 00:22
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: brandon1...@my-deja.com
Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2001 00:13:15 GMT
Local: Mon 22 Jan 2001 00:13
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
In article <3A6B733A.2...@pacbell.net>,

  lab...@pacbell.net wrote:
> Polly wrote:

> <snip>
> > "Saving" the life of or "rescuing" one or a few research animals
does not
> > justify destroying years of research that may save the lives of
many people
> > and many animals in the future.

>   There are several falacies here.  First,
>   rescuing the animal will not destroy any
>   existing research; it will only prevent
>   future use of that animal.

   Agreed, this is a fallacy.

 Second, this sees

>   the animal only as a means, of value only
>   for his/her use to humans.  That is a view I
>   reject.

  Then this is not a fallacy, it is a serious difference in opinion,
and is one of the fundamental differences between AR supporters and
opponents.

  Third, the suffering and injustice

>   to the animal exists now. The obligation to
>   end that suffering and injustice exists now.

  Arguing from the standpoint of AR, in which the existence of said
injustice is established, I agree this would be a fallacy. Also, if the
experiments could be conducted in a more humane way, I would also agree
that there is an obligation to do so.

>   Any future benefit is as nebulous and
>   morally meaningless as the "experience of
>   life" of David's future generations of doomed
>   cows and pigs.

   Correct, just don't get caught up discussing David's beliefs with
Polly.
   Kevin

>    Rat

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http://www.deja.com/

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Martin L. Martens  
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 More options 22 Jan 2001, 00:25
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Martin L. Martens" <rattle.st...@ya.hoo.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 16:28:07 -0800
Local: Mon 22 Jan 2001 00:28
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
Rat & Swan wrote:

[...]

>   There are several falacies here.  First,
>   rescuing the animal will not destroy any
>   existing research; it will only prevent
>   future use of that animal.

To the degree that the existing research depends upon the
animals "rescued", the existing research will most
certainly be destroyed.

ALF "rescuers" have yet to demonstrate any ability to be
selective in their vandalism. They wantonly destroy and
damage labs without care.

>  Second, this sees
>   the animal only as a means, of value only
>   for his/her use to humans.  That is a view I
>   reject.  Third, the suffering and injustice
>   to the animal exists now. The obligation to
>   end that suffering and injustice exists now.

The "obligation" exists only in the minds of self-selected
fascists intent on forcing their beliefs onto the rest of
society.

ALF members are nothing but a bunch of chicken-shit
cowards.


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Martin L. Martens  
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 More options 22 Jan 2001, 00:30
Newsgroups: alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian, alt.food.vegan, talk.politics.animals, rec.food.veg
From: "Martin L. Martens" <rattle.st...@ya.hoo.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Jan 2001 16:32:53 -0800
Local: Mon 22 Jan 2001 00:32
Subject: Re: Reasons for being vegan ( was:Re: Man is a HERBIVORE!!?)
Rat & Swan wrote:

[...]

[...]

>   In every case I know of, those who were trying to
>   expand the recognition of the existing right(s)
>   argued that all those whose right(s)were already
>   recognized and acknowledged had those rights on
>   the basis of certain significant shared characteristics.

And non-human animals do not share the most significant
characteristic necessary for rights - the ability to
reciprocate.

If animals have "inherent" rights, they have those rights
regardless of the transgressor.  The rabbit would have
just as much a claim against a fox as it does a human.
Since it does not, your "theory" collapses into the
incoherent briar patch from which it came.

Pointing to other historically aggrieved minorities only
weakens your argument - if you were correct, you wouldn't
have to continually whine "It's the same thing as..."

[...]


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