youBROKEmyLIFE said:
Seems fine enough for consistency, however I still think there's issues with meat in general (i.e. toll on the land) and how these animals are looked after. I really don't see how you can care so much about how they've been killed and not how they've been treated while alive.
Are you denying that pigs are treated inhumanely in factory farms?
I deny that ALL farmed pigs are treated in this way, just like all chooks on the market aren't battery hens. I am certainly against inhumane factory farming, just as I am against an inhumane death.
They harpoon its head with an explosive device, it blows up and the whales brain explodes. It's not 'instant death', but it's far from the description of a whales death you gave which I'm sure is true in some circumstances... as it is true in some circumstances that hunters will miss a roo's head.
Correction, they aim for the largest part of the body; usually the midsection after the animal blows. Shooting a fleeing whale in the head, when it is only briefly out of the water, from a moving ship in the open sea is a one-in-a-million shot, and I can guarantee you that less than 95% of the time they don't get it. The harpoons typically enter an animal's side, explode and tear it's organs to shreds; the actual cause of death is subsequent blood loss or drowning. Only in a very small percentage of cases the animal takes less than 5 minutes to die; the average time is 15 minutes. Some large animals have been known (and recently, too) to take as long as 40.
The more studies are done the more we're finding out that all sorts of animals (at least in the test) seem to exhibit high intelligence. However, all these studies will be criticised... It's very hard to measure intelligence.
Then how can
you say that pigs are smarter than whales and dogs?
I don't necessarily see the benefit in having 100,000 more minke whales in the ocean.
That's because you don't understand anything about ecology. Apex predators have a significant role in the regulation of a food web.
Did you know that hundreds of species of deep-sea worms that fed exclusively on sunken whale carcasses, dead from old age, have gone extinct in the past 100 years because of whaling? Worms that have an impact on deep-sea oxygen levels, which affect deep-sea plankton, which affect krill, which affects our fish food stocks. It may not be a significant effect, but it is an effect -
everything is connected, and everything has an influence in some measurable way.