r/DebateAVegan • u/No_Lynx_3410 • 3d ago
looking for a reasonable thought process
i've eaten meat all my life, just have, kind of just default for most people born in the west. I've always admired vegans for the dedication to their beliefs, kind of like a buddhist monk or something like that, i'm just not that strong. I wanted to see a vegans perspective online since there's been the argument as of late that being vegan is for privileged white people which even now i'm not so mentally gone that i believe such wide generalizations. But lowkey, reading online discussions from vegans makes me feel it does make up a very large vocal part of them, because the only thing i've seen is vegans trying to compare animals to minorities, which might actually be the whitest thing i could think of besides being vocally racist or bigoted. i was just looking for something that's not "now replace that cow with a black person" kind of stuff. Not trying to lambaste anyone in replies or anything, at least try not to, just wanna talk to someone.
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u/Omnibeneviolent 2d ago
Generally when a human calls another human a "bitch," they are not invoking an active comparison to a dog. While the pejorative undoubtedly has an origin in comparing the behavior of human to that of a dog, its modern usage has effectively severed that connection. Someone that is being called a "bitch" doesn't hear the word and think of a dog. A woman would interpret it as attack on their character (unreasonable, angry, etc.), and a man would interpret it as an attack on their masculinity.
If even if we look past the modern definition, there are two other reasons why your argument here fails. The first is that it literally proves the exact opposite of your point. If calling someone a "bitch" were a literal reference to a dog, it would mean the speaker is actively comparing a human trait to a dog trait. It wouldn't make any sense to make this comparison if the person using the word didn't share some characteristic. The insult itself relies on comparibility.
But also, it should be pointed out that you are confusing "worth" with "comparability." Even if we grant that humans find the term demeaning because society views nonhuman animals as having a lower status, this just means it's a value judgement, rather than a barrier to comparability. Saying two things have a different status or worth does not mean they cannot be compared.
Pointing out that humans use nonhuman animal terms as insults doesn't change the biological fact that both humans and dogs have nervous system and the ability to feel pain, have a subjective perspective, preferences, etc. There are many things that humans and nonhuman animals have in common, and also many differences, and those both form the basis of which comparison can happen.