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This page contains a single entry by Alex published on September 3, 2008 2:01 PM.

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Number of animals killed in the world by the meat, dairy and egg industries since you opened this webpage, not including the billions of marine animals killed annually.

On the issue of "unnecessary suffering"

A participant in an ongoing debate surrounding the question "Should we eat meat?" asked: "What do you mean by "unnecessary suffering?" Who decides what is unnecessary?" The commenter apparently takes issue (or understands what we mean but insists on being obstinate) with the term "unnecessary." I wonder, then, what do we mean by unnecessary?

Terms such as "needless," "superfluous," "excessive," "uncalled for," and "avoidable" are said to be appropriate synonyms according to my English thesaurus. But this isn't really helpful when we are considering an issue - like ethics and nonhumans - so distorted by an all-pervasive prejudice.

For consider: we generally accept the premise that causing another to suffer is only acceptable if the action is necessitated by some general understanding of what constitutes "a need." This would exclude, then, me harming you because it is more convenient than not doing so. You hurting me because you find it entertaining to do so would seem to violate this constraint. The racist, as another example, who causes a black American to suffer because the tradition in which he exists seemingly demands it would be considered unethical. Similarly, it would be wrong, on this premise, for a sexist to harshly "punish" his girlfriend when she expresses an opinion because his father did the same to his mother.

Cutting to the core of this issue then, I think we could reasonably agree that "Because of convenience, entertainment, or tradition I do X to you" would be considered inappropriate given our belief that something as terrible as suffering is only acceptable within a system of strict ethical limits. (See Gary Francione for more.) Avoidability is assumed here too: It's basic, ethically speaking, if I can complete action X without harming you, I ought to do so.

What about something as arbitrary as "I like how it tastes"? It seems to follow from our belief that pain is intrinsically evil that eating animal's because their body parts taste good would violate this premise. We eat animals (and wear their skin and fur, for example) because it is convenient to do so, because most everybody else has done so and continues to do so (i.e., tradition), and because we have learned to enjoy how they taste. And further, we watch the torture of bulls during rodeos and spectator events in Pamplona, Spain because it entertains us. We even insist on forcing bunny rabbits to consume massive quantities of "botox" injections in an effort to find out if it's safe for the Hilton's to use when trying to even out the wrinkles under their eyes because it's what we have always done. (Actually, these torturous experiments - LD 50 - are attempting to find out how much of something it takes for a bunny rabbit to commit suicide by overdoes.)

Ask yourself: Do you believe that we can do anything and everything to animals? Or are their some constraints that we all kind of accept? Consider Michael Vick-esk treatment, or those images of worker's pulling "downer" cows with a forklift. Is it possible that we simply haven't asked ourselves those uncomfortable, but perfectly logical questions, such as: Vick tortured dogs because it entertained him to do so, and we chastised him for it. But what's the difference between that wholly unnecessary example of suffering and us torturing and killing a cow just because we have been conditioned to enjoy how he tastes? (Again, see Francione.) 

The term unnecessary at least implies "avoidable." As such, and I think it's unreasonable to argue otherwise, in this situation with killing the cow, as there are perfectly viable alternatives that many, many individuals have been re-conditioned to enjoy - including "faux cow" options - doesn't our insistence on killing the cow violate our own beliefs about ethics?

Taste, convenience, entertainment, tradition: Is it not intuitive that these impetuses do not provide a good justification for forcing another to suffer? When applied to human suffering, I doubt that I would receive an argument from anyone. Therefore, this raises the question: Why do we accept these justifications - and therefore okay wholly unnecessary suffering - when we are considering animal pain, frustration, harm, terror, or any other form that suffering may take? As Francione argues, if we allow these exceptions, doesn't the "exception swallow the rule"?  

It's clearly a prejudice that mirrors racism and sexism in form: The interests, even at their most fundamental level (e.g., not to be in pain), of X group of individuals doesn't count ethically because those in group Y have arbitrarily decided to make membership in their own group morally relevant and because the Y's have the power to enforce this discrimination. Might, in this case, make's right, as it did in Nazi Germany and pre- (and post-) Civil War America.

Isn't it obvious, however, that we simply haven't unfolded the logic of our own positions about suffering yet? We know what constitutes "unnecessary suffering" in every other case accept in our relationship with nonhumans. And yet, it is precisely this relationship that represents the largest portion of utterly unnecessary suffering being experienced in the world today. Why doesn't this at least deserve a mention? And why am I "extreme" for broaching the question? 

Going further: Doesn't our acceptance of needless suffering on such a massive scale (e.g., 10 billion animals annually in the U.S. alone for food) undercut our own belief that it's almost an ethical absolute that forcing another to suffer is something that should be avoided to the greatest extent possible? This raises another all-important question: What kind of society would we exist in if suffering could be forced on another so needlessly, in such a shockingly cavalier manner? Prejudices such as bigotry have been thoroughly discounted as valid ethical principles, as should our collective speciesism that say's a horses pain doesn't matter if it conflicts with my desire to force him to jump over something. It isn't a good reason and we know it; given our rather muddied ethical history, we need to know it.

So let's dispense with "What's unnecessary?" shall we. You know; I know; we all know.

Will be crossposted @ Vegan Soapbox

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4 Comments

Very thought provoking, I can not claim to be 100% vegan or even vegetarian but we've made a dramatic decrease in purchasing food coming from animals over the past several years. It was from an economic and also a health factor, gradually increasing the number of meatless meals to the point now where those nights are in the minority as opposed to the majority.

This seems to placate the confirmed carnivores in the house and as a former vegetarian, makes life more tolerable for me. I've printed out your post to leave out to see what kind of an impact the train of logic you've penned has on them. Perhaps it will make them think...

Thank you very much for your comment.

It is always heartening to hear that something I write may have some impact byway of decreasing the amount of wholly unnecessary suffering experienced in this world and helping humans along the way.

It was essentially this very same line of reasoning that made me really question what we are doing to animals. Consuming them because they "taste good," most specifically, seems completely wrong if we are to take ethics seriously. The problem, of course, will result from our collective speciesism, which means that we have a prejudice against animals and their interests because they don't belong to our group. However, if you are confronted with any such questions, please refer whomever to the ample amount of writing on speciesism by Gary Francione and Peter Singer.

Good luck with your efforts and step-by-step, I believe you will eventually "placate the carnivores" by substituting their meat dishes with delicious non-meat versions :) Great job!

This is great. Now, if only people other than veg*ns would read this!! It seems perfectly plain to me that suffering = suffering no matter what species is enduring the pain.

I am a vegan. My ethics on concerning animal suffering runs very very deep.

Suffering is suffering is suffering. It is not strong reasoning that differentiates between my suffering the pain from a hot stove and a dogs doing the same; it's prejudice.

Thanks for stopping by, Lisa J.

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