You know, I've been trying to avoid going down the, "you're strawmanning me!"
"no you're strawmanning ME!" path for a while, but you're starting to leave me no choice.
Where have I said that eating excessive amounts of peanuts is important for nutrition? The only point I've made is that the extent to which we factory-farm meat is unnecessary and unethical for the following reasons:
1. Animal cruelty
2. Factory-farmed meat is actually unhealthy for humans
3. It's unnecessary and there are better alternatives
4. Ecological concerns
Where in that set of points do you find, "eating excessive amounts of peanuts?"
1. Feels
2. "Healthy", in relation to food, is an essentially meaningless word. Does it or does it not contribute to nutritional requirements? Is the LD50 small enough that it could reasonably consumed by accident? It's a food, not a fucking poison. It has nutritional value, whether you think it's "good enough" is irrelevant.
3. Peanuts are unnecessary. There are "better" alternatives. So-saith me, the divine arbiter of truth. I decide what everyone needs and wants and no less-than-optimal solutions are acceptable, only perfection.
4. Oh, well with that verbose explanation and compelling argument, I'm completely convinced.
You've said multiple times that factory-farming meat is justified because hedonism. Whether or not you specifically advocate a diet OF factory-farmed meat isn't really relevant - you're supporting it as being better than the alternative of removing factory farming - because hedonism.
You don't get to say, "well it's benefitting the human race because hedonism!" and then backtrack your way out by acting as if you're not by extension endorsing the practice of factory-farming.
That is a poor representation of what I've said. My position does not discern between factory farmed and local farmed - yours does. I'll grant that my position
necessarily includes factory farming, but you're making it the focal point.
I'm not supporting the idea of prohibiting factory farming because hedonism, yes, but also... it has nutritional value. It's not poison and contributes some vital nutrition for humans. It doesn't matter if it can be gotten another way. You're also falsely dichotomizing by implying that the only logical alternative to endorsement is condemnation.
People have different nutritional requirements, access to food, morals/religions, tastes, and get different amounts of pleasure from eating. It's not my place to tell someone "no, you don't need that thing you like, so don't do it". Perhaps the promise of a big juicy steak on Friday is the only thing keeping Bill (hypothetical person) from sticking a gun in his mouth and blowing his fucking brains out. I don't know, I'm not Bill. In that situation, the steak, factory farmed or not, is certainly healthier than the bullet. Same argument can be made for the
poison, alcohol.
You've basically fought tooth and nail in this thread to justify the way we farm the majority of our meat and dairy products, but now you're predictably trying to backpedal out of agreeing to the logical implications of that, being:
1. unhealthier population
2. ecological concerns
3. animal cruelty
Saying something is irrelevant
isn't the same thing as agreeing. That's not "backpedaling", that's just understanding what has and hasn't been said without injecting assumptions.
1 & 2 are only a concern if you make certain assumptions, which we've already gone over 3 or 4 times.
3. But muh feels.
Really wanted to avoid this but...you're actually strawmanning me.
Where did I say I don't condemn
You didn't, hence the question.
Sure, I phrased it in a less-than-soul-crushingly-explict way, but I figured (perhaps wrongly) that exclusively growing your own crops was a fairly ridiculous thing.
If you are, in fact, against big agriculture as well, where do you get your food (Notice this is a question. I'm not putting words in your mouth)? Or is it like meat, where you're just against it in principle but still consume it? What should people eat if not food?
Fallacy and a strawman.
1. I never said that meat production was causing global warming.
2. I never advocated killing all livestock.
3. It doesn't have to stop global warming to still benefit mankind.
Jesus dude, it was another fucking question. That's what the little "?" on the end means.
I proposed a hypothetical solution (posed as a question so as to not put words in your mouth) that may potentially address your "ecological concerns", which you somehow read as me claiming that you support animal genocide. The death of the animals, in this hypothetical situation, was a removal of variables so as to simplify the situation.
You haven't clearly stated what your "ecological concerns" are, but you've cited sources where that seemed to be the primary concern, so I went with what I had.
More straw mans and more fallacy.
You're
really bad at identifying logical fallacies.
You certainly can demonize just about anything - and you can also deify just about anything too if you want. What's your point? This doesn't mean anything. Also, who says I support those other things that aren't sustainable?
I don't know, who is saying that? It's not me. My point was that without a clearly defined metric of "sustainability" you may as well just throw out the argument (of "sustainability" being a reason to not "factory-farm") because it can be used against essentially everything humans produce and consume.
The metric is interwoven with other ethical concerns. That's probably another thread's worth of debate in itself, but in a nutshell I tend to try and look for the realistic best outcomes for individual humans, humanity as a whole and the ecological mechanisms that govern our environment. I don't consider either one of these categories as necessarily more important than another because they're all related.
Realistic being a keyword - I don't think there's a point stopping all production of meat (and no...I don't think we should be turning the world into a peanut plantation either...)
"Best" according to whom? Yourself? Speaking as an individual, forgive me for not caring what
you think is best for
me. You may think I'm just being a dick here, but this hearkens back to the point I was making earlier about people being different. How do you decide what is "best" for an individual without assuming your opinions to be supremely/divinely correct? Or do you just not care that individuals may have preferences/desires that you don't share or possibly, even understand?
(notice the last 2 things said are questions, not putting words in your mouth)
I'd be worried about the hedonism argument then if I were you (just dealing the cards you're playing)
There's a very large difference between "I don't do this because it makes me feel bad" and "You shouldn't do this because it makes me feel bad".