Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Dawn

the dawn dawns. it dawns on victims and it dawns on those
who have caused suffering.
It dawns in slaughterhouse stockyards where animals wait, cold or hot, still without food and water for death, wait for the brutal, panic, slow and deliberate bleeding to death, with urine and feeces and blood inmixed, that is the American "humane" method of slaughter.
There is also the Kosher/Halal method, the local vivero, or live, slaughterhouse methods, and others too.
They all die, slowly, horribly.
This is humanity. This is what we do.
All this blood is on all our hands.
All of us, whether or not we eat meat.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Transhumanism and Animal Abuse aka Vivisection

Cross blogposting here.
This is cruelty, it is not amusing, and it is what those who study science do.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

No, Virginia, it is not "ethical" to eat meat

The New York Times has been having trouble with its ethicists of late.

Seemingly as a sign of these troubles, it has resorted to a contest.

Tell us why, the New York Times asks, it might be ethical to eat meat?

And one notes the presence of popular voices, including cookbook authors, shades of Damon Knight's little story "To Serve Man" and its play on words and expectations, as "judges."

No John Grey here, although he might be able to make a good case for the carnivores. No Matthew Scully, no Gail Eisnitz either. Peter Singer, but his argument goes by the numbers, as a good utilitarian should.


It is not "ethical" -- a weasel word, if ever there was one -- to eat meat.


But it is the case that we do.

The problem here is thus to argue from what is so to what ought to be so.

None of the 814 comments were able to make that leap.

The essays the committee will judge may well do so, but the task is considerable.

That the argument is already stacked in favor of something one will 'vote' a winner is clear in advance. The NYT has to and will print something.

What was argued in the more philosophically minded of the comments made offered variations on an array of philosophical fallacies: that it has always been done (argument from tradition), others do it (bandwagon argument), or else the mindset du jour of sustainabilism or the related contention, usually articulated in seemingly environmentalist terms (whereby the idea is always that the world environment is for the sake of no other creature but the human being) that the eating of meat is the lesser of two evils (a manifestly inaccurate point on a number of levels, although meat eaters who deny that animals suffer are often happily prepared to argue that carrots, say, do feel pain).

An ethical argument for the moral righteousness or goodness of meat eating has yet to be produced.

One might be able to do so, as I once reflected, if one lived as the original inhabitants of the Americas did, and thanked the animals one killed and sought to live in one's life up to the level of the animal. To kill a deer one would then have to meet or exceed all the best qualities of the animal life that is lost for our sake: beauty, speed, gentleness etc.

But as it is, it is quite difficult to measure up to the level of or the qualities of a decent carrot.


Hint: we human beings are not there already, or automatically, if only because where a good carrot is nothing but what it is, the human being often manages to fall short of what it is, a deficiency that is sometimes also the occasion for transcendence.

Thus we are able to ask ourselves whether it is ethical to eat meat. And we are able, provided we are honest, provided we are what we should be, to admit that it is not "ethical."

Friday, January 13, 2012



When a philosophy lecture I had been invited to give at the New School was re-scheduled to a later date giving the students (and me) the freedom to participate I went down to Wall Street to do just that.


As I realized the first time I took a set of photographs (five days earlier), the mainstream media shares surprisingly few images such that one really needs more information.


This gives (just) one view of the OWS event on (just) that particular day.
The OWS movement continues, worldwide.

Babette Babich's Photos for Occupy Wall Street October 5, 2011