Ah, now I think I see. You are right, animal suffering doesn't become less immoral by percentile points. However, there are more and less humane ways of treating the animals we intend to eat. IMO vastly more and vastly less.Audley Strange wrote:Apologies, Let me try and rephrase it then. If the moral position is that it is cruel and therefore wrong to torture and slaughter animals as an industrial process then it doesn't become less immoral by percentile points, it only stops becoming wrong when it stops. It would be inconsistent and in fact immoral to say that it can continue in any shape or form. If it's not consistent, what is the point of claiming it as a moral rather than an emotional or aesthetic position?Ronja wrote:Sorry Audley, I still do not get what you mean.
Which brings into the discussion the practical problem of trying to shut down or radically change any major part of the society/economy fast. I believe that trying to end factory farming abruptly would cause such practical, often economical, problems for many enough farmers that huge numbers of animals would end up suffering a great deal more than they would otherwise. And IMO that would be even more wrong than tolerating a slower dismantling of the (most) industrial aspects of animal husbandry. The information that has lead me to believe this is described below.
My SIL and her husband were/are veterinarians and have both worked in rural areas for years, also as county veterinarians, handling animal cruelty cases on farms. Their first-hand reports combined with a number of news reports on TV, radio and in newspapers during the last 15 years or so - when I have been paying more attention to these things - leads me to believe that if a farmer gets into serious enough economical trouble, his or her animals are likely to suffer a whole lot more as a consequence of such trouble than what those animals would suffer without the economic hardship, even in a typical factory-farming and industrial slaughtering scenario.
It is at those Finnish farms where the bill collector regularly beats at the door and the interests pile up that tens, sometimes hundreds of cows or pigs are found wading in their own muck, several having died of illness, hunger or thirst, or even having drowned in urine, some rotting carcasses still held up by the stall walls. And to add to the tragedy, animals that have been so neglected are not acceptable as human food - so it's a terrible waste all around.
I believe that a slowly/steadily growing pressure from the people, both as consumers and as voters, is the key to such change that won't harm more animals than it can help. If it becomes better business than factory-farming for a farmer to raise fewer animals who get to live a somewhat more humane life with more chances to species-specific behavior, then I would suppose that the better business opportunity would attract, even if a particular farmer was not too emphatic about her or his animals.
That is why I do not believe that ending factory farming as fast as possible would be the most ethical course of action - I believe it would cause more animal suffering than it would prevent.