The Ethics Of What We Eat Peter Singer

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This final reading of Peter Singer and Jim Mason’s “The Ethics of What We Eat” was probably the most eye-opening for me. Here, Singer and mason discuss ethical eating options as well as the food choices of a vegan family, the Farbs. They end up summarizing where we should try and get our food and what exactly we should eat. There were many topics that Mason and Singer wanted the readers to hold onto after that section, but I believed that they can all be generalized into one statement: humans must realize that animals are not inanimate objects with no feelings, and how we raise animals for food not only affects us on a personal level but everyone on a global level. They explain that the output is not worth the input, and that there are many …show more content…

Industrial farming is a huge waste of natural resources. We use too much energy just to produce the food; per capita, the U.S. uses more energy for food production, processing, and distribution than Asia and Africa use for all activities combined” (145). Not only that, but the amount of water we use is ridiculous in comparison to other farms. Mason and Singer stated that “bread delivers roughly the same calorie count as hamburger beef for one-twelfth of the water usage” (237). This is not even including the loss of biodiversity and land that factory farming causes. The worst part is that, like I stated earlier, the output is not worth the input. Industrial farming is an ineffective way of feeding the population. More nutrients goes into growing and feeding the animals to our preferred mass than there are going into us, which is supposedly the whole point of eating meat, gaining nutrients that are “unavailable in plants.” Frances Lappé called this type institution a “protein factory in reverse – meaning that you …show more content…

They give us five principles to judge where and how we purchase our food. The principles are as follows: we have a right to know how our food is produced, producing, food should not impose costs on others, inflicting significant harm on animals for minor reasons is wrong, workers should have decent wages and working conditions, and preserving life and health justifies more than other desires (270-271). The authors explain that we should all make ethical food choices based off of these five principles. Of course, using these principles, all factory-farmed food is off the table, except those that are perfectly raised and naturally cared for (although it would be difficult to prove this). Organically grown foods are, of course, a great ethical choice, but they do have some of the same setbacks that factory-farmed foods may have, mainly being that they will cause some environmental problems, but much less than other types of farming. Vegetarianism is another great ethical food lifestyle, but it still involves eating animal products, which will contribute to the factory farming industry (279). Singer and Mason concluded that the best ethical diet would be that of a vegan, avoiding all animal products since it is so difficult to tell what produce is sustainably raised, and eating organically raised vegetables. This is, based off of this section, probably the best and most ethical diet we

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