Fkkize wrote:Disclaimer: I'm a (almost) vegan myself and this argument relies on the assumption that painlessly killing an animal which had a happy life is not wrong.
The assumption is wrong. If you start with a false premise, you will reach an unsound conclusion.
Is it not wrong to painlessly kill a human who was living a happy life? How about if that human's friends and family would be killed simultaneously, so none would have to mourn the others? Is it wrong to instantly and painlessly wipe out all life on Earth?
Fkkize wrote:
A friend of mine suggested that by being a conscientious omnivore one supports people who profit from more stringent laws concerning the quality of animal life. Vs withhold their money from those people and since Vs don't have a lobby to exert pressure on politics thus the resulting improvement to animal life are less than if they bought food from organic farmers.
Vegans do lobby for animal welfare laws (and more of them should), so that's nonsense.
Economic pressure is a common argument, but in order for economics to work, the system has to be sustainable, and this is not. "Organic" meat, which isn't in any meaningful way less cruel than conventional meat (make no mistake), is a top shelf product made for the minority of consumers who will pay for it. It isn't a replacement for current meat production.
Anon0045 already covered that a bit.
A replacement has to solve the environmental concerns, and be sustainable and scalable. Bioreacted meat fits that bill. Oysters aren't so bad either.