Originally Posted by
Sol_Itaire
^so the real issue then is preservation, not the manner of killing.
Yes. When the goal is to terminate life, no matter how "gentle" the methods we employ, it is still inhumane. In fact, to kill whales by harpoon bears no difference using a hook line and sinker to catch a catfish. So, what I'm trying to say is -- the call to save the whales on the account of their dastardly killing will only fall on deaf ears.
We save the whales not because they have been brutally treated. We save them because we need them to help keep the whole marine ecosystem dynamic.
Originally Posted by
Sol_Itaire
is there really a 'humane' way of killing animals for food?
Since the Animal Welfare Act in most countries, slaughtering of livestock have been made "humane" by definition. Electrocution or stunning is widely employed in public and private abattoirs nowadays although "natural" slaughtering (strangulation) is still common in the provinces.
Originally Posted by
Sol_Itaire
I'm all the more drawn to the idea of picking ripe fruits off a tree or uprooting tubers from the ground.
Maayo pa sis. The Good Book has it that man's original diet was supposed to be Grains, Fruits, Nuts and Herbs until man tried animal flesh. The findings of anthropologist/archaeologists also suggest that the diet of early humans were basically vegetarian until they invented tools.
Maayo tingali magpamembro nalang kaha ta sa Hare Krishna ani. Also reminds me too of that yoga center sa Banilad...Ananda Marga ba to?