In the article from brown.edu entitled "A Framework for Making Ethical Decisions," the author states several different approaches to making ethical decisions. One of these approaches, under the Non-Consequentialist Theories category, is the Rights Approach. This approach borrows words from Kant, saying, to paraphrase, "act in a way that you treat all of humanity, whether it is yourself or someone else, as their own end and never as a means to another end" (Brown).
What does this say about veganism? Well, the article brings up a very good point, saying "many now argue that animals . . . have rights" (Brown). And here veganism comes in. Many people could easily use the Rights Approach to validate veganism, arguing that eating meat or consuming animal byproducts violates animal rights. And really, they'd be right. It's not like the meat industry treats their animals well. This video shows what happens in one of Iowa's largest pig farms (viewer discretion advised). And while it's easy to say that this isn't what happens to all animals who eventually end up on our table, it is impossible to deny that this is the reality for many companies in the meat industry.
If you abide by the Rights Approach to ethics, it seems pretty clear that abstaining from meat/animal products is the ethical way to go. As the article later states, the guiding light for ethics according to the Rights Approach is whatever action "respects the rights of all who have a stake in the decision"(Brown). But not everyone abides by this approach.
I, for one, am guilty of not being vegan. No matter how many animal rights videos I watch, and how often I feel aghast watching videos like the one above, there is just some part of me that cannot give up my bacon and burgers. Call it unethical if you will; I'll call it "using the Egoistic Approach." This approach states "self-interest is a prerequisite to self-respect and respect for others" (Brown). Eating meat/animal byproducts is definitely done out of my own self-interest. But I can validate it through this approach by saying that in order to respect others and myself, I have to look out for Number 1: myself.
Is this actually ethical, though? The Brown.edu article outlines a process for making ethical decisions: Recognize the ethical issue, Consider parties involved, Gather all relevant information, Formulate actions and consider alternatives, Make a decision and consider it, Act, Reflect on outcome. According to this process, becoming a vegan is probably the correct--or most ethical--response to the mistreatment of animals in the meat industry.
Still, I can't seem to bring myself to become a vegan. Maybe this is just an impermissible decision I have to live with, or maybe it speaks to a larger reality: theorizing about ethics is one thing, but living by that theory is entirely different.
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