by Sharon
Seltzer
August 16, 2012
Written by Robert Grillo -- Founder of
Free From Harm
Of all the
convoluted rationalizations for eating meat in an age when eating meat is
not at all necessary for our survival or health, many people today are
borrowing a popular slogan I like to call 'the personal choice
self-deception.' It goes something like this: 'My decision to eat meat is a
personal choice.' And it is usually followed by a statement sympathetic to
their vegan and vegetarian friends, acknowledging that they too are making
personal choices that are right for them. Sounds great on the surface, but
it's what lurks beyond the surface that I find deeply disturbing for five
key reasons.
1. Eating is a communal, multi-cultural activity until the
vegan sits down at the table
First, let's take a closer look at what
personal means in the context of the highly social human activity of eating.
Personal
food choices had never been discussed at the dinner table until a
growing number of vegans and vegetarians -- by their very presence at the
table ' question the legitimacy of eating animals. A person who tells you
that their meat eating is a personal choice is really telling you 'stay
away.' They don't want you to question their highly-coveted moral beliefs or
perhaps they object to exposing their unexamined moral quandary over how one
can justify using and killing animals for food in an age when it is
completely unnecessary. In other words, 'They have made this issue personal
precisely in response to you making it public.'
2. There is no free
choice without awareness
The irony is that while meat eaters defend their
choice to eat meat as a personal one, they will nonetheless go to great
lengths to defend it publicly when confronted with a vegan or vegetarian.
Like some apologetic white liberals who defend themselves by defiantly
exclaiming to a new black acquaintance, 'But I have black friends too!',
some meat eaters will go to great lengths to explain how intimately they
understand veganism since they have vegan friends, have already heard and
evaluated their reasons for going vegan and respect them dearly.
They've
considered being vegan carefully, they will assure you, and have concluded
that it's just not for them. But instead of arriving at some novel new
understanding of why humans should eat meat, they simply revert back to the
traditional arguments that are all pretty much centered around what social
psychologist Melanie Joy calls the three N's of justification: eating meat
is normal, natural and necessary. But their reasoning reveals the fact that
they have sorely overlooked the big idea behind veganism which author Jenny
Brown points out so eloquently in her book The Lucky Ones: 'We can become
prisoners of our earliest indoctrinations or we can choose to look
critically at our assumptions and align our lives with our values. Choosing
to live vegan is how we're able to do that best.'
3. The choice has a
victim and the victim is completely ignored
Let's take a look at the
issue from the animal victim's perspective which has been completely denied
by the meat eater's unexamined assumption that animals have no interest or
understanding of the value of their individual lives. Does the animal who is
being bred, raised and slaughtered for someone's food care if the person who
is eating meat has given the prospect of becoming vegan any serious moral
consideration? Of course not.
The notion that these conscious meat eaters
think they have done their due diligence by examining the pros and cons of
eating animals means nothing for those that value their lives as we do. The
fact is the animals we raise for meat have at least as much of an interest
in staying alive, avoiding pain and suffering and seeking pleasure as these
meat eaters' pets. As activist Twyla Francois so aptly puts it: 'All animals
have the same capacity for suffering, but how we see them differs and that
determines what we'll tolerate happening to them. In the western world, we
feel it wrong to torture and eat cats and dogs, but perfectly acceptable to
do the same to animals equally as sentient and capable of suffering. No
being who prides himself on rationality can continue to support such
behaviour.'
4. Many personal choices we make have dire consequence for
ourselves and others
Now let's take a closer look at the meaning of
choice itself. The act of making a choice implies that the actor has free
will and awareness of the options and their consequences. In the spirit of
justice, we live in a society where our actions and choices are governed by
what society deems acceptable. We can make a personal choice to maim, rape
or kill someone, but these actions will have consequences that serve as a
deterrent. It is generally accepted in a democratic society that we are free
to do what we want as long as it doesn't harm anyone else or infringe on the
same rights and freedoms of others.
Yet, for the meat eater, the choice
of eating animals is completely disconnected from this concept of justice
since justice does NOT for them apply to other species, only to humans (how
convenient). In other words, there are no visible, negative consequences to
eating meat. The victims remain invisible and silent to those who eat them,
and that is perhaps the greatest deception of all.
5. Atrocities are
never personal
In reality, the choice to eat meat negates the very
meaning of choice because the animal that had to be killed to procure the
meat had no choice in the matter at all. And the notion of characterizing
such a choice as a personal one is even more problematic since the choice
required the taking of another's life, not a personal sacrifice. Nothing
could be more public than the taking of a sentient life that cares about his
own life, particularly when the act is not necessary and therefore not
morally defensible.
When 60 billion land animals and another approximate
60 billion marine animals are killed every year across the planet for
'personal' food choices made by a single species that are based on palate
pleasure alone, eating meat ceases to be a matter of personal choice; it
becomes a social justice movement to protect the rights of animals. To deny
animals the right to live their lives according to their own interests is
wrong and to attempt to defend our choice to eat them as a personal one is
delusional.
http://www.care2.com/causes/5-reasons-why-meat-eating-cant-be-considered-a-personal-choice.html
--Reflected in our dog's eyes is a world that is far better,
always
loving,
free of judgment,
and endlessly forgiving.
Through our
love of them....... we live there, too." I have developed a deep respect for
animals. I consider them fellow living creatures with certain rights that
should not be violated any more than those of humans. ~Jimmy Stewart