I understand when people speak about the ethical problems with eating meat, but I think they do not apply to fish.

  • Որբունի@jlai.lu
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    9 months ago

    Why do you think they do not apply?

    Some reasons why I think they apply:

    • fish are animals
    • industrial fishing is destroying the oceans and sea life (way more is killed than what ends up sold and eventually maybe eaten)
    • international waters are a lawless playground for every abuse imaginable

    I eat fish so I am not playing the guilt game, they’re just the ethical considerations I can think of.

    • mommykink@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Counterpoint: we really don’t know how much self-awareness fish have versus the mammals that the OP seems to be referring to. Call it gross anthropocentrism, but most people respect the lives of non-humans in terms of intelligence. Pigs are pretty well understood to he intelligent and are probably conscious of what’s going on around them. Some shrimp? Maybe not.

      This doesn’t really address the meta concerns w/r/t procurement in your comment, but if I had to choose between a plate of fish or a plate of pork, this would be my thought process.

        • Beemo Dinosaurierfuß@feddit.de
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          9 months ago

          Just to be the super-nerd, octopus is not a regular latin word.
          I think it is actually a greek loan word in latin.

          So the plural is either octopodes to follow the original greek or octopuses in regular english.

          • Susaga@ttrpg.network
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            9 months ago

            The correct plural is whatever word you say that people understand as meaning more than one octopus. That’s how language works.

            • Beemo Dinosaurierfuß@feddit.de
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              9 months ago

              I mean I get your point and for all intents and purposes I don’t even necessarily disagree.

              I just wanted to add this little factoid, since I think using “octopi” instead of the at least equally as correct “octopuses” shows that one tries to follow the etymology of the word.
              And if you try to do that, the etymologically correct plural is “octopodes”.

              Then again I hesitated even answering you, since I am by no means one of those weirdos that has a problem with language changing.

              For all I care we can talk about octopussies and octopiarians or whatever, but as someone that had to learn latin as a child, the use of octopi just kind of itches my brain.

              But it is all good, I get what you are saying and my first post was never meant as a negative critique of OP and more as a fun fact.

        • Drusas@kbin.social
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          9 months ago

          ‘Octopi’, interestingly enough, is a result of people assuming that the word ‘octopus’ comes from Latin because it ends in -us, which would mean that the correct plural drops the ‘us’ and replaces it with an ‘i’. But, trickily enough, it does not come from Latin; it comes from Greek. As a result, if you’re trying to be super technical, the correct plural would instead replace the ‘us’ with ‘odes’–octopodes.

          Of course, almost nobody actually uses that term unless they’re doing it for fun. The most commonly used, correct plurals for octopus are ‘octopuses’ and ‘octopus’.

          I hope you enjoy that little tidbit as much as I did when I learned it.

          • Chuymatt@kbin.social
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            9 months ago

            They will also punch fish they hunt with if they are frustrated with them, which is hilarious.

            • livus@kbin.social
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              9 months ago

              @Chuymatt totally hilarious!

              When I first saw footage of them hunt that way I thought it was an equal partnership like fish have with eels, but the punching makes it clear that’s not how the octopus sees it.

        • Devi@kbin.social
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          9 months ago

          The Octopuses solving puzzles is actually overblown a bit. I used to work in an aquarium and had to teach an octopus to open a jar to get its food out. They can do this, but they’re not that smart so you need to break it into tiny steps. Even ‘your food is inside the jar’ was a difficult lesson.

      • livus@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        @PP_BOY_ but more and more research is showing us that fish are smart.

        E.g goldfish driving “cars” around in a room, the research on those fish that choose eels to hunt with and communicate via gesture, etc

    • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      It’s not that they don’t apply to us, it’s that they don’t apply to many vegetarian cultures. I remember a lesson in history class about how, when Buddhism arrived in Japan and preached against meat consumption, fish were so ingrained in Japanese diet they had a literal revolution to keep fish on the menu. Not just the stereotypical things like sushi, but I guess they like fish so much they’ll eat dolphins (which their cuisine has always considered “fish”), which to me is equal in gravity to cannibalism, this coming from someone who doesn’t necessarily like them. Because if an animal is mindful enough to engage in diplomacy, why the hell are we eating them?

      Sometimes this “except you” attitude is also applied to insects, though that seems to be less culturally specific. If people need to for some reason reconcile vegetarianism with needing meat, I don’t understand why they don’t do the obvious thing and just separate meat of animals killed in cold blood from other meats.

      • Drusas@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        Sushi as we know it is actually relatively modern. The Japanese made a few exceptions to vegetarianism mostly out of practicality. For example, birds were also not seen as animals.

        Somewhat related to this, there was an emperor who died of beriberi because apparently all he ate was polished white rice.

      • TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        9 months ago

        I think this kind of example is interesting as it demonstrates how much of a person’s values and ethics are determined by cultural factors.

        I’ve always been fascinated by cuisine as a part of culture and your demonstrated overlap of cuisine and ethics is another fascinating aspect to ponder.

  • livus@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    I disagree. The two main arguments against eating land animals are 1) cruelty and deprivation of life and 2) effect on the planet.

    Both of these apply. Commercial fishing uses inhumane killing methods and fish are actually quite intelligent.

    Overfishing is completely destroying the ocean ecosystems and will even have a knock-on effect on land ecosystems eg salmon in rivers normally transfer masses of nutrients to land and trees via bears etc.

    • GONADS125@feddit.de
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      9 months ago

      The idea that fish do not experience pain is also ludicrous… They possess a central nervous system and can very much feel pain.

      I’m also opposed to catch & release fishing for fun/sport for this reason.

      Imagine a hyper-advanced species suddenly and painfully yanked you up into different atmospheric conditions where you’re desperately unable to breathe.

      Is it perfectly acceptable just because they put you back down in your natural environment before you died, with a new painful wound and traumatic experience?

      I certainly don’t think so…

      • Devi@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        Their bodies are also formed to exist supported by the water. When taken out their very bodies are crushing their organs. It’s grim.

    • Alue42@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      OP didn’t specify commercial fishing. What about traditional fishing practices, or a singular fisher catching for himself/family?

      • Zarxrax@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Commercial fishing just makes it happen at scale a lot more efficiently. If every person who ate fish was out there fishing for themselves, I would imagine it would be a significantly larger impact than the commercial fishing.

        • Alue42@kbin.social
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          9 months ago

          You are deliberately not answering the question.

          “If every person that ate fish was out there…” exactly - they purchase fish caught commercially because either they don’t know how to catch their own fish or they don’t have access to catch their own fish (access either with time, money, or physically). Commercial fishing solves that by precisely doing it “at scale a lot more efficiently” as you pointed out and ships the fish to where people will purchase it.

          I didn’t ask “what if everyone went out and did it themselves”

          I asked your thoughts on people who DO fish for themselves, or those using traditional fishing practices.

      • livus@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        @Alue42 but that then still maps closely onto the ethical issues around meat-eating per se versus eating the products of commercial meat production.

        Which makes eating fish no different to eating other kinds of meat in terms of the ethics.

  • stoy
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    9 months ago

    In a global ecological sense, it is worse to eat fish than pork, we are sucking the seas dry, we have known it for decades, and invented new methods to do it more efficiently.

    With land animals you can see the conditions and the effect of over production, with fish you don’t, and we keep at it.

    Grown fish is less bad, but still contribute to pollution of the seas.

    Trawling should be banned globally for a minimum of 50 years.

    • Alue42@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      We have also invented ways to do it more sustainably, and even have handy wallet sized Sustainable Seafood Lists for each region of the US to make sure you make sustainable choices when eating at restaurants or purchasing at the market
      Seafood Watch Guides

      • livus@kbin.social
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        9 months ago

        @Alue42 we used to have these in New Zealand. It was a card you could keep in your wallet, listed all the common eating fish from best to worst, with sustainable ones coded green at the top and endangered ones in red.

        But it was depressing over the years with each new edition to slowly see all those green fish turning orange and then red as each species became depleted.

        • Alue42@kbin.social
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          9 months ago

          I just tried looking for you, and the most up to date I could find was for 2017. That’s disappointing, but slightly out of date is better than nothing.

          • livus@kbin.social
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            9 months ago

            @Alue42

            By 2017 it had already happened - almost all the NZ fish had gone from the green zone and they’d started putting farmed shellfish and stuff caught in international waters at the top of the list to make up for it.

            I think those of us who care about our local marine environment seldom eat actual fish now. We don’t really need a guide any more.

  • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    They are certainly a lot of issues with eating fish. Maybe not the same as factory farmed land animals. More along the lines of extinction of species and the destruction of ecosystems. It’s worth looking into if it’s something you are concerned with. There’s also indirect cruelty to more intelligent species like dolphins.

  • pavnilschanda@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Fishing is industrialized too, so that can be a problem, specifically with the aquatic ecosystem. For vegans, fish still have a central nervous system so they are deemed undesireable. I still would eat fish because of health reasons, though.

    • TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      I’m reminded of the thought experiment of the vegan oyster.

      The oyster lacks a CNS and cannot feel pain or suffering. It’s farming is a net benefit on the environment its in as it acts as a natural filter for purifying waterways. It is nutritious. Is it vegan? If not, why? Is it that is merely alive? How does that differ from a plant or mushroom?

      While I don’t think one could seriously suggest an oyster is vegan friendly food, it’s an interesting line of thinking to inspect one’s own values.

    • GoldELox@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      extreme environmental issues, mass execution of innocence, destruction of indigenous culture and land.

      theres definitely a couple easy ones to point to.

      idk why it wouldnt apply to fish

  • Paragone@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Depends on the perspective being considered:

    Are fish sentient? Yes.

    Are they very sentient, with lots of free-will? No.

    Does our current industry’s completely-gutting the marine food-chain have global consequences? Yes.

    How are we doing with respect to keeping that food-chain alive? Terrible: any species that becomes our industrial prey, gets reduced to 10% of its normal population within 1 decade.

    Cod used to live to be about 80y old, ttbomk, now they live to be 8, or less.

    The smashing of the coral-forests they breed in, at the bottom of the ocean, with dragger-nets ( falsely called “rock hoppers” ), means the cod-fishery collapsed & stayed collapsed, and all fisheries are “managed” like that, by lobbying to protect industrial-ignorance.

    Accountability won’t ever happen, because industry/money won’t tolerate that.

    There’s a ScientificallyTestablePrediction in the Christian bible, in Rev, that both terrestrial & marine food-chains collapse ( at the time of the “3rd Seal” ).

    That is going to happen this century, no matter what political/religious rabies goes rampaging where.

    All the political & religious & food-insecurity & ClimatePunctuation wars that we must enact in order to “manage” our unconscious-minds’ stress/fear/panic, and all of the nihilist malicious-actors ( China cyaniding other country’s seas, because those other countries are not breaking & obeying China, in recent news )…


    Morality is contextual.

    Personal-context can say 1 thing, or another, global context can be quite different.

    Buddha said that eating the flesh of another’s life was faulty because they never consented to be butchered/consumed, and that is true.

    I can’t remember what other reasons were given, that one stuck on me.

    I don’t eat any meat, or that aweful “Beyond Meat” or “Impossible Meat” stuff, because I can’t then reach the meditations I’m using to rip my continuum out from this world’s ideology-driven death-spasms, and remaining in this world, now, is indulging in being ground-to-hamburger, in my eyes.

    I want out.

    Eating meat of any kind blocks me from progressing on that through the meditations, exactly as the ancient rishis of India said.

    That tested to be true.


    You have to live with yourself, not with my conscience.

    You decide on your own morality: you have to live with it.

    I’ve never bothered learning the “precepts” or any of the other stuff of AwakeSoulism/Buddhism: I care about results, not about dogma.

    What tests to be true, that is worth relying-on, for me.

    _ /\ _

  • Patapon Enjoyer@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    My entire ethical framework for what animals are ok to eat is wether or not it’s cute.

    I say eat them.

  • FrostyCaveman@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Farmed fish is probably not too bad by comparison but… wild caught fish hell no. We’re speed running fucking up the ocean ecosystem and ruining the aquatic biosphere. It always alarms me when I see a change to the species of fish used in “generic budget oven-cook battered fish fillets”. It doesn’t even seem possible to make wild catch fishing sustainable, unlike every other form of animal husbandry where you could argue it’s more of a technical challenge.

    Hmm now I realise I’m a hypocrite. Think I’ll stop eating fish

    • Drusas@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      Farmed fish is often worse. The fish are kept in small pens and given tons of antibiotics, polluting the local water. Sometimes those non-native fish escape the pens and interbreed with native species. They are also less nutritious than wild fish, at least when it comes to salmon.