(Bloomberg) -- The world’s most-developed nations will be told to curb their excessive appetite for meat as part of the first comprehensive plan to bring the global agrifood industry into line with the Paris climate agreement.Most Read from BloombergRussia Downs Drones Over Moscow in Ukrainian Retaliatory StrikeChina Says Multiple Pathogens Are Behind Spike in Respiratory IllnessesSodium in Batteries: Shift May Herald Another ShakeupMarkets Cheer as Milei Drops Dollarization for Macri BrassEvery
Oh no, I’m so sorry for your poor friends. It must have been so hard to not abuse animals. I understand, not abusing animals is hard. When I stopped beating my dog with a rolled up newspaper every day, I was so depressed. I’m sure your friends are going through the exact same thing as me now that they aren’t paying for companies to put animals in cages and kill them.
no one does that.
If you don’t think meat comes from locking animals in cages and killing them, where the fuck do you think meat comes from?
i don’t pay companies to do that. no one does.
Lots of people pay for meat
yea. but the people doing the caging and killing are paid before that meat ever lands in a supermarket or restaurant. and they’re usually paid by the people who own the facility.
Who get their money from the supermarket, who get their money from…?
interestingly, after you spend money, it’s not yours anymore, and you don’t get to decide how the recipient spends it.
And that’s why you shouldn’t give your money to killers, or to people whose job is to pay killers.