Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Diet choice is a moral choice

I went to a meeting of people who want to fight hunger here and throughout the world.

I want to see our religious communities--and all of us who strive to be moral beings--consider the moral arguments relating to what we eat. If we come together to address the problem of hunger, it seems fair to raise the point that a much more efficient use of natural resources will mean fewer hungry people. The limited amount of natural resources, (land surface, aquifer water and fossil fuel), available for planting, watering and fertilizing crops can feed more people when we eat the grains and other plants directly rather than process them through the bodies of animals such as cows, pigs, various kinds of birds, etc.

If we want to feed more people and we are coming up against limits on natural resources involved in food production, then we must be interested in finding the more efficient sources of nutrition.

In the large group I saw that night, no one said that they knew of a moral argument related to what we eat. I think that this question of whether we use our precious life-sustaining resources efficiently, (so that fewer or no people are left wanting basic nourishment, and so that wildlife and biodiversity are not needlessly destroyed), is a moral question. We should choose a more environmentally friendly diet-style over a less environmentally friendly diet-style. Our times demand it. The fact is ecosystems can support large populations of plant-eaters, but only small populations of animal-eaters. We need to respond intelligently and morally to the reality of our situation.

Another moral argument related to what we eat would be that we exploit beings as things when we mechanize animal agriculture and intensify confinement systems: more crowding, more abuse, more fetid, miserable conditions, more pollution. We've demoted beings to the status of commodities. Treating a being as a thing is tantamount to slavery. It is wrong.

Do we want a culture of tolerance, mutual respect and non-violence? We can bring ourselves closer to creating this reality by developing a deeper respect for one another's person and psyche. We must recognize others as individuals who are not objects but who are subjects of their own lives. They are not means to our ends. They are ends in themselves.

We sometimes come to know members of other species as individuals. We see their unique personalities. We feel a concern for their interests and well-being. But at the same time, we prefer not to consider the fact that there are creatures held captive on our behalf in stifling, fetid, miserable, oppressive conditions that we do not want to know about. These animals are themselves unique individuals; subjects of their own lives--not objects to be used by us as means to our ends. We take their lives, after oppressing them interminably from the first day of their conscious existence … all so we can use the flesh of their bodies to trigger certain taste and texture sensations on our palate.

Where is the sense of outrage?


A cure for what ails the planet: How to promote justice and ensure a sustainable society

We have to respect moral principles to make society work. Neurons in a network seem to recognize this, too.

2 comments:

  1. This is the reason I cut down my animal consumption by about 90%. Your argument is real, it is valid, it is immediate. I'm not saying everyone should give up eating and using animal products completely, but if we could get people to use far less of them so much would improve, the care taking of animals, the overuse of antibiotics could stop, the high levels of bacteria seeping into the soil and water around large farms could be stopped, the abuse of both animals and people at these huge meat processing plants would stop, we could start growing multiple crops again instead of monocrops, our bodies could be healthier (well as long as we don't load them with junk) and on and on....

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  2. I agree with much of what you said, today 6years after article was posted 'we' have non animal food products to go far in feeding more with less animal products. I see a distribution problem more than a supply problem.
    Until governments allow its people tools of energy - which will advance production- of their choosing - then they will continue to be dependent !

    There are more prospects for and energy resource types, than needed ! and once again .......

    I think it's the distribution of energy-electricity that will break poverty!

    It it's tough for nearly all cultures which are w/o electricity !


    But once they have it ........ they - then - have choices, and once they have choices, they can gain experiences to allow them to flourish!

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