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I'm no vegetarian, but I'll go ahead and guess that it would be OK for them. Vegans on the other hand...probably not. |
I've posed the question to fairly dedicated vegan friends before. The deciding factor is consent. Food animals are unable to give consent, whereas BJ recipients are generally on board with everything that is going to happen.
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So...would a vegan eat human meat if they crashed in, say, the Andes Mountains, and a dying fellow traveler said it would be okay?
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Vegans should eat cum and breast milk in large quantities if they want to stay healthy.
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All life springs from death and dissolution -- into the furtherance of life. Veganism is for citified people who, well, are at odds with ecology in general. (Shudder) Not for me, thank you. I much prefer chowing down on a vegetarian recipe than listening to the half-educated drivel that seems so much of veggie-and-beyond-veggie philosophy. Some may be more comfortable devouring something that is highly unlikely to actually notice you devouring it, but I've never seen that that would make moral odds in light of the above. |
That's my chief objection to veganism as a moral eating choice. It is based on a hierarchy where the closer something resembles me the more value it has and the less it resembles me the less value it has.
I think what makes it the most suspect is that the moral outrage about killing is really a thinly veiled attempt at self validation. |
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Oink, Baybeee. :blush:
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"Ah! You have made a common mistake here...what you have there is a beet and you have confused it with food. Food is something like a ham sandwich or a bowl of chile."
- Paul Hinrichs One of my favorite usenet quotes. |
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