Al-In-Italy
New Bee
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2010
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Pembrokeshire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 5
The strict vegans I've known seem to have signed up to an ideology. Just as it's extremely difficult to persuade a staunch socialist that capitalism has some good points or a resolute neoliberal that markets don't always get it right, so it's futile throwing facts at a vegan zealot. They just bounce off.
PETA and its ilk believe that all human-animal relationships where humans gain anything are exploitative. That includes keeping animals as domestic pets. Personally, I think our rescue dogs and cats are exploiting us, but I suppose PETA would probably say that just proves I'm a anthropocentrist.
For animal rightists, keeping a hen in captivity and taking its eggs is always exploitation. There is no difference between eggs from battery farms and those produced by your next door's pampered rescued battery hen.
Similarly, no matter how well beekeepers tend their bees, taking honey from them is considered always exploitative. It makes no difference if a human is certain they are taking only what is surplus to what the bees will need over the coming winter and it makes no difference if the honey comes from a dubious Chinese source that produces tonnes a year or from someone down the road who has kept three hives in his back garden for 20 years.
Fanatics of any sort try to avoid facts, logic and the wider view. They can't allow themselves to see shades of grey, because that could call into question their fundamental views of the world and their place in it. Sorting out moral and ethical ambiguities on your own requires far more effort than just joining a particular club and complying with its hard and fast rules.
PETA and its ilk believe that all human-animal relationships where humans gain anything are exploitative. That includes keeping animals as domestic pets. Personally, I think our rescue dogs and cats are exploiting us, but I suppose PETA would probably say that just proves I'm a anthropocentrist.
For animal rightists, keeping a hen in captivity and taking its eggs is always exploitation. There is no difference between eggs from battery farms and those produced by your next door's pampered rescued battery hen.
Similarly, no matter how well beekeepers tend their bees, taking honey from them is considered always exploitative. It makes no difference if a human is certain they are taking only what is surplus to what the bees will need over the coming winter and it makes no difference if the honey comes from a dubious Chinese source that produces tonnes a year or from someone down the road who has kept three hives in his back garden for 20 years.
Fanatics of any sort try to avoid facts, logic and the wider view. They can't allow themselves to see shades of grey, because that could call into question their fundamental views of the world and their place in it. Sorting out moral and ethical ambiguities on your own requires far more effort than just joining a particular club and complying with its hard and fast rules.