EquALLity wrote:It's not really a stretch of the imagination to imagine that corporations would treat animals cruelly to maximize profits.
The thing is you don't even have to imagine it: it's publicly available information from industry sources and universities (their agriculture departments, where they teach this stuff as common practice).
EquALLity wrote:and corporations have no ethical compass.
Corporations are made up of people who have ethical compasses (companies are full of whistleblowers on other issues), the trouble is that a lot of people are ready to discount nonhuman animals as having much if any ethical consideration, under the excuse that "god gave man dominion over animals", or belief that they aren't sentient, or that it's necessary to kill them.
When we regard or rationalize something as necessary, it's very easy to turn off the conscience.
EquALLity wrote:*Of course, sometimes the government does lie,
Some governments make a habit of lying and disseminating propaganda. This depends on government corruption and censorship (without which it's functionally impossible for the government to maintain a lie long). Lies always leak, but if the media isn't allowed to report on the leak, it can be contained.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corruptio ... ions_Index
This is not terribly reliable, but it's in the right ballpark. The various blue shaded countries have governments that are generally trustworthy.
Now
politicians are another matter entirely, they lie profusely, but it's easy for an
individual to lie when motivated to do so (we don't have such reliable whistleblowers popping out of our brains and informing the press).
Political parties are less inclined to lie, but they can be delusional like the clergy or any religion (any party, and both Democrats and Republicans in the states, but on different issues). This is distinct from scientific consensus, where there are mechanisms in place to control for bias and a tradition of following evidence rather than dogma.
EquALLity wrote:because it can make sense it some cases (from the perspective of government).
Military secrets, and those essential to national security, are hard to keep too, so what they do is limit the information to those who need to know, and spread numerous lines of misinformation: e.g. "Our secret base has 2k people and is located in Brazil" "Our secret base has 5k people and is located in Argentina" "our secret base has 500 people and is located in Chile"
Because the real information will inevitably leak, the only way to hide it is a huge volume of misinformation so nobody can figure out which is real.
I don't think I've seen any of these effective tactics employed at NASA or within the Animal Agriculture industry.