Now that big farm has made all plants into toxic genetically mutilated food-substitutes, I have no issue will destroying the lot of them.
Now that big farm has made all plants into toxic genetically mutilated food-substitutes, I have no issue will destroying the lot of them.
My main problem with vegetarians is that they act like there will still be huge retirement farms for chickens, cows and pigs when people stop eating them.
Imagine the logistics of that.
Cows would actually become extinct.
the cowboy way wrote:
My main problem with vegetarians is that they act like there will still be huge retirement farms for chickens, cows and pigs when people stop eating them.
Imagine the logistics of that.
Cows would actually become extinct.
But wouldn't the rarity of cows make them, unlike today, uncommon enough to be a circus attraction?
electron1661 wrote:
As someone mentioned in this forum, plants WANT to be eaten. It's in their nature.
I said SOME plants want to be eaten. Others like the soybeans and many mushrooms make it very plain that they don't want to be eaten, by evolving anti-edibility chemicals. These poor creatures are cruelly slaughtered in the millions by animal-supremacist vegans, who will hug a tree because it's tall and majestic looking but an innocent little bean plant is a lesser being somehow.
One more thing about fungi: because so many mushrooms are so deadly poisonous, it is not ethical to assume that even non-poisonous mushrooms want to be eaten. They may simply have not evolved the poisons yet. Same deal with berries.
Citrus fruits for the most part all want to be et, I think. But most vegans live in places where they don't grow so they have to be transported with fossil fuels and cheap exploitive labor.