Rum wrote:Sometimes the most honest thing to say is I am uncertain. I am with this issue. The thought of any unnecessary suffering for animals turns my stomach, but then so does the thought of a child suffering and being killed by leukaemia for which a cure might be found by testing it on animals. At one time I would have said the cost was easily worth it. Now I am not so sure.
The anti-testers do say that the vast majority of testing can be done without the use of animals. I don't know if that is the case as I have not read the arguments in detail, however if that is the case then surely we should put as much effort as possible into developing those systems and testing regimes.
+1
I'm also wondering, since we can grow tissues and meat in labs, if we can grow stuff to test on. Grow stuff that can't feel pain.
But then, we won't learn much about pain if we do that. And some might say, "Why not just breed animals and then damage the pain centers in their brains before testing? Wouldn't that be cheaper, and lead to a more thorough, relible experiment, what with all the unknown variables of interacting systems and tissues that we can't necessarily simulate well in virtual form..."
And I don't know what to say, other than the woodgie answer that it makes me uncomfortable, but less uncomfortable than testing on humans, or just resigning ourselves to not developing new treatments, because they're dangerous when they aren't thoroughly tested...
Wodgie woodge woodge...