this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2026
878 points (91.0% liked)

Lemmy Shitpost

38150 readers
4551 users here now

Welcome to Lemmy Shitpost. Here you can shitpost to your hearts content.

Anything and everything goes. Memes, Jokes, Vents and Banter. Though we still have to comply with lemmy.world instance rules. So behave!


Rules:

1. Be Respectful


Refrain from using harmful language pertaining to a protected characteristic: e.g. race, gender, sexuality, disability or religion.

Refrain from being argumentative when responding or commenting to posts/replies. Personal attacks are not welcome here.

...


2. No Illegal Content


Content that violates the law. Any post/comment found to be in breach of common law will be removed and given to the authorities if required.

That means:

-No promoting violence/threats against any individuals

-No CSA content or Revenge Porn

-No sharing private/personal information (Doxxing)

...


3. No Spam


Posting the same post, no matter the intent is against the rules.

-If you have posted content, please refrain from re-posting said content within this community.

-Do not spam posts with intent to harass, annoy, bully, advertise, scam or harm this community.

-No posting Scams/Advertisements/Phishing Links/IP Grabbers

-No Bots, Bots will be banned from the community.

...


4. No Porn/ExplicitContent


-Do not post explicit content. Lemmy.World is not the instance for NSFW content.

-Do not post Gore or Shock Content.

...


5. No Enciting Harassment,Brigading, Doxxing or Witch Hunts


-Do not Brigade other Communities

-No calls to action against other communities/users within Lemmy or outside of Lemmy.

-No Witch Hunts against users/communities.

-No content that harasses members within or outside of the community.

...


6. NSFW should be behind NSFW tags.


-Content that is NSFW should be behind NSFW tags.

-Content that might be distressing should be kept behind NSFW tags.

...

If you see content that is a breach of the rules, please flag and report the comment and a moderator will take action where they can.


Also check out:

Partnered Communities:

1.Memes

2.Lemmy Review

3.Mildly Infuriating

4.Lemmy Be Wholesome

5.No Stupid Questions

6.You Should Know

7.Comedy Heaven

8.Credible Defense

9.Ten Forward

10.LinuxMemes (Linux themed memes)


Reach out to

All communities included on the sidebar are to be made in compliance with the instance rules. Striker

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] stickly@lemmy.world 19 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Animals can have rights and be protected from unnecessary cruelty without anthropomophizing them and granting full human rights. You're equating full, sapient humans with a species specifically bred for a base purpose without higher levels of thought and expression.

I don't even think that statement is anthropocentric hubris. If ultra-advanced aliens showed up tomorrow and started domesticating humans for food or some other purpose, I would have the default expectation of them having the same or similar morals. Maybe we'd get access to decent healthcare and good libraries before we went to the slaughterhouse.

Cows get more rights than trees or crops because they have an ability to express pain and convey emotion. They don't have the same rights as humans because they could never give a passionate argument for suffrage to a jury.

And to be clear: there are plenty of real, tangible reasons to end animal husbandry and make everyone vegan without even touching philosophy.

[–] merdaverse@lemmy.zip -1 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

If ultra-advanced aliens showed up tomorrow and started domesticating humans for food or some other purpose, I would have the default expectation of them having the same or similar morals. Maybe we’d get access to decent healthcare and good libraries before we went to the slaughterhouse

I can't believe you said this with a straight face. This is the depths of depravity and mental gymnastics that a non vegan philosophical position leads to. I'm also sure that if this actually happened, you would throw your logic in the trash, where it belongs, and you would fight for the liberation of the slaughtered race.

Do you want to extend the argument to a person who is in a permanent comatose state? By your definition, they are without "higher levels of thought and expression". Is it cool to eat them?

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 2 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

If the advanced aliens had the control over us that we exert over animals then I wouldn't have a choice. And whether I fight or not isn't relevant to their choice to farm me. If anything it's in their best interest to keep me healthy and content until I'm harvested.

Your coma example is laughable. They're a human. A medical procedure (even if we don't have the technology to perform it) could return them to normal function. Turning a cow into a human-like creature is a different discussion altogether, it would be a transformation at such a fundamental level that we might as well be discussing artificial personhood instead of the ethics of diet.

If we invented a procedure that could make corn moo would it no longer be vegan?

[–] merdaverse@lemmy.zip 1 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

If the advanced aliens had the control over us that we exert over animals then I wouldn’t have a choice. And whether I fight or not isn’t relevant to their choice to farm me. If anything it’s in their best interest to keep me healthy and content until I’m harvested.

You keep avoiding the moral implications here because you know the argument is bs. If some groups of people mass bred and slaughtered monkeys or dogs on an industrial scale would you not care, because they don't have a choice? It would be the same as your example, without the alien hypotheticals.

A medical procedure could return them to normal function

The disconnect between the logical, robotical analysis in the first case and the childish, optimistic look here really just highlights the compartmentalization you have to go through for a "coherent" position.

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 1 points 3 hours ago

I don't quite understand what you mean by moral implications. Would I be upset if aliens started eating people? Yeah, that would suck. Would it be morally defensible to fight back in the same way a cow might kick? Of course. But I can't consider their view because they are defined as a higher tier of being in this scenario.

You're imagining little green humans with forks when it may just as well be a hyper-developed cloud of space bacteria. In their view, every human gut biome is a slave pit where trillions can be massacred at will.

Using us as incubators and then harvesting the "human" collection of cell resources is a perfectly ethical thing to do. Who cares about the shrieking sound waves and fluid that spills out while humans melt, that might as well be the smell of fresh cut grass. It's just a bunch of clones of one DNA sequence vs the plethora of diverse cells unleashed from the gut. Easy decision.

Keeping us happy and healthy is crucial for the health of the gut biome, no need to cause any undue stress because that would hurt the final product. But of course, through gene manipulation or artificial selection they can make us into a more durable and docile species.

...And at that point modern humans are effectively extinct. I don't have to worry about the ethics of an incubation vat in the same way you don't worry about our bizzarre and unnatural domesticated crops.


the childish, optimistic look here really just highlights the compartmentalization you have to go through for a "coherent" position.

I'm totally lost here. You're saying a comatose human is actually not a human but it is an animal (and therefore gets human rights)? My "higher thought" point is that our measure of life is relative to human features and human ability. A comatose human is very obviously still a human. Hell, even a dead human is still a human until it decays away and is recycled into something else.

Instead of silly screaming corn: What if I bred creatures that couldn't express pain in any measurable way? Just sacks of flesh that you could herd around and harvest when they're big enough. Slice off some reproductive piece and stick it in a tube to grow the next batch. Basically a meat tree on legs.

Is that unethical? Just because it's gross? It's no different than a plant. What if I told you I made them from pig DNA [no harm was done to the pig btw] but I cut out all traces of sensory organs that might convey pain. They can sense just barely enough to stand upright and only have the barest parts of a brain needed to grow more mass.

At what point does the distasteful husbandry become acceptable gardening? When the creatures can't move? When the red blood is sap? Does the flesh have to be green instead of pink? Do the insides need to taste like a mango instead of bacon? Does it need photosynthesis like a spotted salamander or a sea slug?

Your position is incoherent if you can't tell me exactly where the line is crossed AND that line is solid for all vegans. When does that lifeform gain or lose rights?

If you can't do that or admit there's subjectivity in the judgment then why can't that subjectivity hold for cultures that bred dogs for food? Dogs are clearly not humans, but they're too close to my personal experience of pets for comfort. That clearly isn't the case with all humans, so I can't pass judgment on the mere fact that a dog is eaten.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 0 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Slaves can have rights and be protected from unnecessary cruelty without anthropomophizing them and granting full human rights. You’re equating full, sapient humans with a species specifically bred for a base purpose without higher levels of thought and expression.

Your ancestors, probably

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Kind of racist to suggest that slaves were a different species

[–] Strawberry@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)
[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

The point is that the animals I eat are the same species as me?

You seem confused.

[–] Strawberry@lemmy.blahaj.zone 0 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

You seem to have extremely poor reading comprehension.

The point is that slavers used racist pseudoscience to claim that enslaved people were a different, "lesser" species, to justify their enslavement. Not only was this incorrect, but even if it were true it would provide no justification. Speciesism is irrational and the human-invented line between species is completely irrelevant to the moral worth of individuals on either side of that line.

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Right, but cows are not the same species as human. Slaves are human. Do you really not see the difference?

Or are you literally arguing against the entire concept of specication? Becuase if so, then that's really fucking stupid.

[–] Strawberry@lemmy.blahaj.zone 0 points 8 hours ago

I said speciesism, not speciation. Again with the reading comprehension.

You seem to have a conception of species as some magical boundary ordained by God that permits all harm. In reality it is an arbitrary human concept pertaining to evolution and genetic relatedness. There is no inherent moral component to it. Your prescription of moral unworth to individuals of different species from our own is called speciesism, and it does not follow logically from the mere differentiation of species.

This will be my final comment, because you're incredibly rude.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 2 points 1 day ago (2 children)

That's exactly how people justified slavery in the past, and it is how the person I replied to justified their argument. That's my entire point. It's the same argument.

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

Except that slaves were/are humans. Literally the same species.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 0 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Yes, obviously, we all agree on that today, but at the time, that wasn't widely accepted.

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 10 hours ago

So one day we'll all agree that cows and humans are the same species? Is that the implication?

[–] goedel@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 1 day ago

other animals are a different species

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (3 children)

This is a ludicrous argument. If you truly believe that all animals have the same rights then the only internally consistent conclusion is the virtual extermination of the human species.

Life is a zero sum game. Something lives by consuming something else or displacing it for access to limited resources. Optimizing for the minimum harm to earth's ecosystem is always going to be the end of agriculture, housing, hunting, industry and basically everything other human institution. We're the most insidious invasive species ever and the world would be healthier without us mucking around.

So unless you're stumping for that, don't pretend to have the moral high ground. If you are, stop wasting your time shaming people and skip right to culling them.

[–] ageedizzle@piefed.ca 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Bro would rather exterminate all humans than admit that he should just go vegan 

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Brother I am vegan (at least 95% in diet if you want to quibble over niche animal product additives). I'm just not going to shed tears over every single creature on earth like they're my family pet while losing sight of the purpose of harm reduction. Why is the few grams of milk powder in your chips more important than mass deforestation supporting your avocados and coffee?

If most militant vegans actually examined their emotional arguments before they posted them people would take them way more seriously. Animals suffering and dying might make you deeply uncomfortable but that's not a universal experience. You can't browbeat people out of 15k years of animal husbandry just because you personally couldn't stomach skinning a rabbit.

[–] EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Something lives by consuming something else or displacing it for access to limited resources.

True, but no one gives a shit when the consumed life is a plant.

People say the "plants feel pain" thing rhetorically, but it isn't a serious argument. And if they were somehow actually being serious, then this would actually strengthen the case to only consume plants due the efficiency of doing so vs consuming animal products.

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Plants don't have to feel pain to be a lynch pin in the ecosystem supporting the animals around them. One less native plant is one less place to shelter or feed an endangered animal, or one less set of roots preventing the erosion of a habitat at risk.

Eliminating animal products mitigates the problem but it in no way absolves you from our exponential consumption of finite resources, and in many ways it's naive non-solution.

For example: culling and eating pest animals like deer is not vegan, but leaving them alone with no natural predators does exponentially more harm to all other animals that depend on the native plants decimated by an unchecked deer population. Eliminating the predators is a human-caused problem but washing our hands of the situation will kill far more.

[–] EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com 0 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

Eliminating animal products mitigates the problem but it in no way absolves you from our exponential consumption of finite resources, and in many ways it’s naive non-solution.

Well, I have chosen to not reproduce. So at least my consumption has an expiration date. I'm sure this doesn't absolve me either, but it's what it is.

For example: culling and eating pest animals like deer is not vegan

There is something truly distasteful about bringing a sentient being into existence for the sole purpose of exploiting it. Although I don't hunt (or fish), I don't take issue with it so long as it is done in a responsible manner. I know "responsible" is subjective, but I'm not taking an extreme position on it.

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 2 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago)

For the record I 100% agree with both of your positions in practice. We slightly differ on the topic of distaste for exploiting life.

IMO that's a function of how many human features we attribute to the life and how we exploit it. Thus it's very subjective and can only be looked at in the aggregate: slaughtering cows and pigs is distasteful because they bleed and scream like any mammal. Milking is exploitative but it can be a much less invasive process and a more fair exchange for a decent life of domestic animals. Think of the human job of a wet nurse, it doesn't inherently have to be shitty. In practice its just not feasible to have a benign and symbiotic relationship while providing milk for everyone.

I'm just here to rail against extreme positions like "all animals must have the same rights". It's such a seemingly benevolent statement that's loaded with much more complex implications when you apply it to reality.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

I advocate for humanity to live in harmony and balance with our environment, that is why I am anti-imperialist and anti-capitalist as well as vegan. Our history is plagued with exploitation, that can't be denied, but I am trying to change it and you are arguing that it cannot be changed and that we shouldn't even try.

Humanity's relationship with animals and nature has historically been exploitative but it doesn't need to be that way.

We have vastly increased our ability to produce food. There are ample resources available on the planet for all of us to share and live in abundance. Human greed and selfishness is rewarded by our society. That means our society needs to change.

I reject your argument that life is a zero-sum game. My happiness does not need to come at the expense of another's unhappiness. We can all work together to create a better future for all living things on our planet.

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I reject your argument that life is a zero-sum game

Then you're a fundamentally blind idealist or just lying to yourself. The absolute bare minimum, purely vegetarian footprint needed to support a human is about 0.2 acres (~800 m²). That's 0.2 acres of precious arable land that could support dozens of species of plants, insects and animals purely dedicated to one human and their crops. A diverse and thriving array of life traded for one person and a handful of domesticated species.

From there you're now looking at displacement and damage from housing, water usage, soil degradation, waste disposal, pest control and every other basic necessity. God forbid you get into modern niceties like health care, transportation, education, arts, sciences, etc...

Humans aren't friendly little forest nymphs, we're megafauna. Even the most benign and innocuous species of primates (such as lemurs and marmosets) peaked their populations in the high millions. Getting the human population down from 8.3 billion to a sustainable level is a 99%+ reduction. That's a more complete eradication than any genocide in recorded history, let alone the sheer amount of death and scope of institutional collapse.

That's just a flat fact of our reality. Either 99% of humans have no right to exist or humans are inherently a higher class of animal. Choose one.

We have vastly increased our ability to produce food. There are ample resources available on the planet for all of us to share and live in abundance.

Uh ooooooh... someone isn't familiar with how dependent our agriculture is on pesticides, petrochemicals and heavy industry 😬

We (currently) have ample oil and topsoil. Not ample sustainable food. Don't even get me started on out other niche limits, like our approach to peak mineral supply or pollinator collapse.

[–] ageedizzle@piefed.ca 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Not everything is black and white. You are painting a picture where we have two options: (1) cause as much harm as we please and not worry about the consequences, or (2) cause no harm at all by eradicating our species from the face of the Earth (which would actually cause a lot of harm to members of our species but we’ll sidestep that for now).  

But this is of course a false dichotomy. Because there are degrees to this. A vegan diet is undoubtably less harmful, both in its carbon footprint and in the direct harm in causes to other species. So if someone wants to reduce the amount of harm they are causing it’s the way to go. So why try to diminish that with this ridiculous dichotomy between death to all humans or unmitigated animal torture? If someone wants to decrease of amount of harm they are causing shouldn’t we be encouraging this sort of prosocial mindset? 

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I'm not the one making the dichotomy! I'm fully in favor of all harm reduction possible (including a vegan/utilitarian vegan diet) for the obvious benefit of our own species. The commenter above is positing that there is no ethical direct/indirect violence toward any animals. It's impossible to hold that position while simultaneously pretending billions of people can exist.

I feel like I'm taking crazy pills. A simple rational examination of our limited resources is being discarded because "animals have human rights/you support slavery/you want animals to be raped". No, I have a very obvious and consistent position:

Humans are a higher class of animal and being good stewards of our only planet is crucial for our own well being. We thrive with nature and unnatural violence (like industrial animal farming) is bad for our psyche anyway. That doesn't mean animals can't or won't die to support our existence.

This stuff is so basic and fundamental; tradeoffs HAVE to be made. Pretending that the world can support life (let alone a good life) for billions of people without animal death/displacement/extinction is deranged. It's on the commenter to pick up the shambles of that position and make anything that can fit in the real world.

[–] ageedizzle@piefed.ca 2 points 1 day ago

You could argue that our way of life in wealthy countries is impossible without the exploitation of the third-world. Does that mean we are a higher class of humans? No.

Let’s just strive to be as harmless as possible and leave our grand philosophical ideas about who is better than who aside.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Dude, I never, ever wrote that there would be no competition for resources like land. That's fucking obvious. That doesn't make life a "zero sum game", a zero sum game means that every gain is someone elses' loss, and that at the end of the game there are no new resources created. That is strictly not true. We can take actions in life which benefit us without harming others.

In real life, humans have rights, but we also take a balanced view of rights when there are conflicts. For example, if we need to build some important infrastructure, that takes priority over the rights of whoever is living where that infrastructure needs to go. My argument is that the rights of animals not to be killed is more important than our desire to have a tasty meal. I'm not out here arguing we shouldn't build wind turbines because of their negative impacts on wildlife, because I know the positive impacts on countering climate change is better overall.

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 1 points 23 hours ago* (last edited 23 hours ago) (1 children)

You're still in denial here. There can be symbiosis in nature where species can cohabitate to the benefit of both, but that's just two different niches being filled. It's a completely orthogonal topic to species competing for the same niche. It's not about building windmills and good vibes; human beings have overstepped our natural boundaries with billions of people in places we have absolutely no evolutionary excuse to be.

We've done this strictly because we can; it's the natural animal inclination to favor your own progeny and expand your access to resources. Our ability to adapt has broken the evolutionary game. We won. The mere existence of 8.3 billion humans causes an unfathomable amount of harm that can't be fixed by skipping "tasty meals". That's the ethical equivalent of whitewashing guilt and ignoring the structural problem.

So asserting something like "all animals have equal rights" is asinine. They clearly don't, and we can't change that without abandoning the 99% of human souls who stress the system beyond its natural ethical bounds (within the expected balance of evolution).

The carrying capacity of Earth is 2-4 billion people, and that's assuming an ultimate human primacy with no regard to other species (except in the amoral ways they could sustain human existence). A "harmless" existence is a fleeting fraction of that, the small niche filled as hunter-gatherer megafauna mammals. This is a hard physical fact no matter what universal rights we put on paper. The choice is quite literally billions of human lives against trillions of birds/insects/fish/critters/predators/prey in conflict with them. There's no free lunch.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 0 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Wait, are you saying that earth is overpopulated, now? I didn't realize I was in conversation with a nazi, but honestly, it explains a lot. Which ethnic group do you want to exterminate?

[–] stickly@lemmy.world 2 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

How's the weather in your fantasy land? You winning your fight against that straw man? I didn't say anything about over or under population, that's a completely different philosophical discussion. That would be a debate over questions like:

  • What quality of life is acceptable?
  • Is putting a finite lifespan on civilization acceptable? If so, how long?
  • Is it ethical to depopulate? By what methods?
  • Would it be ethical to conserve resources to sustain civilization in perpetuity by euthanizing the infirm?
  • What about a hard limit on personal consumption a la Logan's Run ?

You are constricting your ethical ideal to automatically answer some of those questions. Here's a rephrasing of our conversation:

  • Fact 1: Humanity is confined to earth with a finite supply of completely non renewable resources [I'd encourage you to look into the impossibility of inter-planetary human civilization, the gist being that humans evolved for the specifically for Earth and it's ecology; we'll never have the energy and raw materials to reproduce that]
  • Fact 2: There is a hard limit on Earth's capacity to sustainably support life. This would be a carrying capacity in the low billions if all resources were dedicated to humans.
  • Fact 3: Earth has 8 billion humans and counting. This is sustained entirely by a limited reserve of biochemical energy stored over millions of years. [I can get into the technical details if you'd like but there is no escaping the physical laws of entropy + our energy usage. ie: solar panels can't cover the resource cost of more solar panels.] Depending on your thoughts on population management, this is either fine and we'll just burn through our civilization's resources or our population will be reduced by some method in conjunction with resource management to extend the lifespan of human civilization
  • Fact 4: Humans evolved to fit a specific niche. This natural ecological role is as a primitive hunter gatherer, foraging in balance with other species. This minimal impact state has a far lower maximum sustainable population in the range of 10s of millions. Perhaps lower depending on how many modern life improvements you let expand the ecological footprint.
  • Your ethical axiom: All creatures have the exact same rights as humans

This axiom automatically answers many questions raised by the other facts.

  • If reproduction is a natural right in any capacity, humanity can't ever ethically exceed earth's carrying capacity. Until we reach a sustainable usage of our resources, humans must be equitably and fairly culled to preserve the rights of humans and other animals (because other animals don't have the agency to cull themselves like humans)
  • Civilisation must be sustainable or the rights of our progeny will be infringed by our own consumption
  • The sustainable state must not infringe unnecessarily on the rights of other animals. This, defacto, limits us near our primal state described in Fact 4.
  • Ergo: Getting to that state requires a 99%+ reduction in the human population. That low level of human population without access to our resource intensive modern tools is basically a collapse of civilization.

You can whine and sarcastically deflect but that's the conclusion of your statement on total, universal animal rights. It's not an undefendable position, but you must understand you're pushing for a heavily restrained form of Anarcho-primitivism. If the concept of near total human civilization collapse for the benefit of other animals makes you uncomfortable (as it does for me), you'd want to reconsider that view in some way:

  • All lifeforms have rights but our human existence requires us to value human rights above others
  • Species suicide is the only ethical option because humans are the only creature capable of making that choice
  • Any ethical framework for universal animal rights is unenforceable in reality even if correct. ie. The personal choice to harm another animal is unethical but the act itself is not. Indirect and accidental harm is more acceptable than direct harm

So I ask again, what's your choice? There's no free lunch.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social -1 points 12 hours ago (1 children)
[–] stickly@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago
[–] a1tsca13@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

We have vastly increased our ability to produce food.

And it has been largely the (petro)chemical industry responsible for this. The Haber-Bosch process transformed agriculture, but accounts for percent-level quantities of global energy consumption and carbon emissions. And it requires raw materials that are typically produced from hydrocarbons (although admittedly there are renewable options). And other nutrients typically come from mining (even organic options) - which displaces many species of all sorts. And this does not account for pesticides, etc., that others have mentioned.

Prior to the development of modern chemistry, our best sources of fertilizer were often animal manures - which require breeding, raising, and ultimately usually killing animals.

Sure, there is a lot we can do to minimize harm, and generally we should, and I try to myself as much as possible. But I'm not fooling myself into thinking that eating vegan or growing my food organically means nothing or no one suffered. Until we all go back to pre-agrarian societies, we will continue to cause large-scale destruction in some way. But of course this in itself would cause massive population decline and resultant suffering in humans.

[–] bearboiblake@pawb.social 2 points 1 day ago

I’m not fooling myself into thinking that eating vegan or growing my food organically means nothing or no one suffered.

There isn't any vegan out there who believes that. The point of veganism isn"t to be perfect, it's to reduce harm as much as practically possible.

Of course I am in favor of sustainable farming practices and minimizing use of fossil fuel industry products, but even with all of that factored in, the social/environmental impact of a vegan diet is hugely reduced, compared to a meat-eater's diet, and significantly healthier with massively reduced risk of heart disease and cancer among other conditions. That's not really a solid reason to go vegan IMO, I think animal welfare is the only reason that matters, but it's a nice bonus I guess.