It's a hard problem. You may remember that in other threads (possibly in this one too), I hypothesized that the only practical stable means of doing so would be to remove the profit motive of the farmers, by making all animal use non-profit. This helps relieve the economic pressures to cut corners.Viking Redbeard wrote:For my part I haven't yet been persuaded that a system that allows the ownership of human beings or animals can result in anything like a positive outcome for the victims of the system.
This is because the only way slavery is profitable over just hiring people for low wages is to cut so many corners that you make them more miserable than any free man would be willing to be.Viking Redbeard wrote:I've seen many of the regulations that were used to try to ameliorate the sufferings of slaves in the American South, and none of them had any significant positive effect. The reason is because the rights of the owner in almost every case superseded the rights of his property, which it had to if the institution of slavery was to continue to exist.
It's an issue of slavery being forced to compete with the labor of wage workers. Of course the institution would collapse if free men are cheaper (which is easy to achieve without minimum wage laws, unions, etc.).
The same is not true for non-human animals, who have inherent biological differences.
Machines are slowly changing this, of course, but without those a dog will always be superior to a human at sniffing for drugs or bombs, no matter how much money you spend on the dog since it's something humans just can't do.
Non-human animal use maintains a certain biological monopoly which human slavery could never claim.
Well, lawmakers don't usually own farms. The only animals most of those in power own are dogs and cats -- and those animals are the ones we as a society have chosen to regard almost as family members.Viking Redbeard wrote:Protection regulations were actually pretty strong in some states, but they were routinely violated and rarely enforced since the ones holding all the power were the owners.
This is only an issue today with the animal agriculture lobby. Remove the profit motive, and you destroy most of that.
It could also be destroyed legislatively without removing the profit motive, through restrictions on lobbying and campaign financing.
There are many options here. Liberation doesn't seem like a realistic one.
So, there are two ways to correct that. Raise the price of meat, increasing the resources available to be dedicated to the slaughter and reducing demand, or enforce the laws be taking some political power away from these companies and making it so expensive to ignore the law that companies comply or go bankrupt.Viking Redbeard wrote:Answer: it won't be for as long as large amounts of meat is in demand and the ones holding the power are the ones who own the cows.
Which is why I think the institution would probably have to be non-profit in order to most reliably solve these issues.Viking Redbeard wrote:In other words, regulations can only improve the welfare of animals until profits are affected - and that's the point where the regulations in question are either shot down or routinely violated.
Legislation could fix it too, but enforcement at the current demand would be very expensive.
What would you consider 'significant'?Viking Redbeard wrote:If there's a case in modern history in which regulations have significantly improved the treatment of animals on farms or in labs (which is where 99% of owned animals exist) but eaten into profit or progress, I'd love to hear it.
They have in labs, where they are more easily enforced (larger budget and more oversight for the animals, since they are in experimental conditions).
garrethdsouza might pop in to give you some specific examples on that front.
That may be, but the difference between "this is wrong because animals have inviolable moral rights to not be used because use is always wrong because I said so based on inconsistent reasoning, appeals to emotion, and supernatural authority" and "this is usually wrong because it usually results in suffering, so we should ban it since we don't have a good way to implement oversight to improve these conditions, until such oversight can prove itself to be viable in practice" means everything. It's the difference between being dogmatic and being reasonable. The former makes veganism look like some kind of cult, and it supports the carnists' claims that vegans are irrational.Viking Redbeard wrote:Hence, I consider myself to be a consquentialist, but when it comes to the practical application of laws against human and animal ownership, I see very little (if any) difference between the utilitarian and deontological approaches.