OK, first of all, America isn't the world.LiMaSaRe said:This is definitely a peeve of mine. Feminist lobbying groups provide a "minority voice"? the minority of which ~51% of Americans are a member? open a dictionary.Farther than stars said:There's not necessarily anything wrong with lobbying groups focusing on one specific area over another. Look at what feminist lobbying groups have done for women and continue doing for women, even today in Western societies. It's good to have minority voices in a democracy. It stops the overwhelming masses from disregarding the plight of those who would otherwise be ignored. Then it's up to government, as a democratically elected body, to decide what balance to strike between different interests. After all, if all everyone ever talked about was humans, animals would never be given any attention at all.
Secondly, it's completely true that women are not a minority. However, that doesn't stop the media from portraying women's issues as minority issues, since they've been neglected in the past in the same way the issues of actual minorities have been neglected. Also, historically women have been oppressed in the same way other minorities have. So there are definitely parallels.
Thirdly, I didn't call women a minority. I named feminist lobbying groups as an example of lobbying groups and then I went on to talk about the importance of minority voices. So while you might be able to fault me for having a fairly weak link between my explanation and my illustration, I made no gross semantic error.
More importantly, however, just because something is common practice, doesn't mean it's morally right. Saying that it is, is a very slippery slope, because you could start making cases in which the Holocaust would be OK.LiMaSaRe said:Pigs and cows never posed a threat to us. Carrots and spinach never posed a threat to us. I'm not sure " not posing a threat to us" is much of a reason not to harm other species, because then we would not be able to kill any other living thing on Earth.j-e-f-f-e-r-s said:No matter how you feel about PETA, or whether whaling helped industrialise the West, whaling was wrong, just as slavery and apartheid were wrong. Wales never posed a threat to us. We had no need to venture into their territory and start killing them off in such huge numbers. That we did is one of the great shames of humanity as a species.
And as has been pointed out, no, whaling is not the same as slavery or apartheid, and your opinions are not facts anyway, there is no wrongness meter you can consult.
And I definitely think that there is a strong principled case to be made for not killing animals, especially in the vein of vegetarianism:
-Healthwise, it's better for the individual not to eat meat.
-It's better for the environment not to eat meat.
-Not eating meat frees up resources which could be used to feed people in developing nations.
Just because people do kill animals and eat their meat, doesn't mean that's necessarily right, despite widespread consensus. In that same way people of the Dark Ages were wrong about the sun revolving around the earth, despite the fact that everyone thought that at the time.