Pandabearparade said:
Do I have your permission to join a debate club, Slayer?
NO!... Kidding, but only if we see a bit of improvement with your walking-thesaurus skills
LifeCharacter said:
Would you prefer that he just repeat the arguments other people have made, again?
Honestly, yes. Better than a "I'm right, you're wrong" answer with fancy wording. Or he could just say "read the other arguments", or even quote them, if time permits. Or just ignore me, if he must.
In case you haven't noticed, people have provided actual arguments in support of the pet option only to be coutnered with remarks about how your own species should always take precedence (except, of course, when it comes to all those fun video games and such that we buy instead of food for the starving.)
That's all great, but I believe I've addressed most of those points earlier on. In case you missed it, let me answer them again.
So, which argument would you like to respond to?
All of them, thank you.
1. Some of us view pets as family members and strangers as well, strangers. Since most people would choose their mother or brother or sister over a stranger, why is choosing what we consider a family member morally wrong?
I respond with another hypothetical scenario. A wacko breaks into your home, he has a gun with one round and a suicide vest. He threatens to shoot either your dog or your, say, mother (or any other family member you love and respect). If you do not choose, he will set off a suicide vest and kill all of you. The one you choose will be shot in the brain, and he will flee the scene. What do you choose? The answer should be obvious. The problem with this argument is that it does not take the degree of attachment you might have to a "family member". If your dog dies, you might be sad a week or two, but you'll recover quickly, and likely buy a new dog soon. No matter what the pro-pet group may say, your dog does not really have as much value as a family member. If your mother is shot, you can't just grieve a few days and then go buy a new one a month later.
2. If saving my pet is so inhumanly selfish that it means that all of humanities problems are my fault, why is buying video games, movies, and all other sorts of luxury goods instead of buying food for the poor so acceptable?
This argument is flawed because of the different scenarios (indirect vs. direct). Donating all your money to charities MAY help someone, or it may go to pay charities overhead costs. There is also the fact that you are likely never going to see the benefits of your help, where as I'm sure most people would be very grateful for you saving them, and express it to your face. Also, with no entertainment of any kind, many humans would become depressed and possibly kill themselves or cause injury to themselves intentionally. Think I'm exaggerating, imagine if I took anything fun out of your life that costs even a cent, would you really want you keep living? I'm not saying don't donate, I'm saying if you're gonna do it, you don't need to give away everything you own. You don't need to be so extreme, you can have fun and still help the world at the same time, it's not black or white. Also, you CAN save this guy from drowning, you can NOT fix the entire world. Hell, you can't even put a dent in our problems, but does that mean you shouldn't try to some extent?
3. Your morality isn't the one universal truth. Since you can't claim the majority, you can't claim that your morals are representative of the whole of human morality. And no, claiming that morality is subjective does not mean that I believe that rapists and murderers are acceptable because they also don't have the majority.
No it is not, and I don't usually enjoy preaching it. But this has made me feel physically ill, and the fact that most of the people here have complained about "the state of humanity these days" doesn't help. I'd also like to point out that a poll with less than 1500 voters is a small, small demographic. And although there is no nice way to say this, it is possible there are a lot of mentally challenged people, and people with a less than average amount of friends and social skills, hence they may relate to and love a pet more than the average person, while disliking strangers
more. If you're obsessed with the majority, it is
likely that most people would save the human, although you'd have to do a polling of a wider demographic to get a better scope of things. No matter how much you may love your pet, do you really think watching someone drown (and not helping them) is going to be easily forgotten? Drowning is NOT a peaceful way to go, you will remember the event for decades to come and you WILL find your nightmares haunted by the images of it, if you have any semblance of a conscious. Where as if I ran over a dog in my car, I'd feel bad, but not for long, and I doubt I'd have more than a few dreams about it. And that's me directly killing it, not just letting it drown. How would you feel if you ran over a human?