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We live in an age when human parts are being grown and implanted, certainly there is some flexibility in our collective morality. Many of those who back the potential life saving techniques of bio-tech medicine, some of which require or portend the harvesting of human materials, oppose the same techniques when used in agriculture. Selective breeding is a euphemism for culling those animals, which were not displaying the desired traits. Medicated or destroy, inject with steroids or cull, the intent remains the same.Lady Day said:It is one thing to say 'My animal needs a shot of medicine once a season because it is sick', but now, the norm is 'My animal needs a shot and medicine in its food to keep it from getting sick'.
You cant compare carful breeding and selection over thousands of years by man to create these domesticated animals to the abrupt disregard of all those lessons learned to play to the glut of 'yield' in mass production.
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So yeah, in that since, I guess you are right.
LD
It is a complex issued riddled with relativist pitfalls, but the bottom line is, if you want it pure, you had better grow it or raise it yourself.