Montegriffo wrote: ↑Fri Nov 23, 2018 10:49 am
JohnDonne wrote: ↑Fri Nov 23, 2018 9:53 am
Speaker to Animals wrote: ↑Fri Nov 23, 2018 9:40 am
> What the fuck, man?? You can't feed the lions nothing but wheat grass! This is animal abuse. Lions are carnivores for fuck sake.
>> sounds like an appeal to nature to me. You cannot argue that we ought to feed lions meat just because they evolved that way. Stop being Hitler.
Lol I don’t support lions being held in captivity.
Don't let the strawmen distract you John, you're holding your own here.
Apologies if I've asked you this before, how do you feel about the Muntjak deer issue?
Here in Norfolk and Suffolk, they are becoming a real problem. They were first brought to England in 1958 to stock a few country estates as an ornamental species.
Unfortunately, they have thrived in the wild and are damaging the habitat and out-competing our indigenous deer species.
They do untold damage to young trees by stripping the bark.
Those few animals brought here 70 years ago now amount to an estimated population of 5 million and a study commissioned to look into the problem recommended an immediate cull of one and a half million Muntjak.
As a long time vegetarian, I can find no moral objection to humanely killing and eating
this invasive (and very healthy, organic and tasty) animal.
What say you?
Hmm, definitely a gray area, and of course it has nothing to do with the ethics of meat eating in general.
My two cents: Ecosystems don’t have any inherent subjective interests, though sentient animals do. Therefore, from an ethical point of view there needs to be some ethically relevant reason that we should go out of our way to kill these creatures. Are they going to over-eat themselves and other creatures to starvation, creating more suffering for more creatures, including themselves than if they were killed? I’m not saying I would then think it’s cool to kill these animals, but it would be a rationale for population control that would be difficult to argue against.
But I think there’s the assumption that killing deer is the only option for population control, when they might be given vasectomies so that they can continue to mate without creating more deer, which could even more effectively limit their populations. That would be ethically preferable to killing in my opinion.
In the end, I also have trouble with this idea, I don’t think humans are necessarily obligated to meddle with ecological problems, even the ones that “we” created, when it involves violating the lives of sentient creatures. I sometimes think we should stop trying to control ecosystems and instead limit our effects on them as much as practically possible.