Comments by "Deus Ex Homeboy" (@DeusExHomeboy) on "Animal Rights Extremists: Trespassing to Rescue Chickens" video.

  1. I look at the comments section, and by what seems to appeal to majority of vice viewers, I can conclude either: a- The average commenter and "reactor" seem to either be a long time sub of vice, and has watched a lot of shit from around the world (sure, a lot of it is stupid, but that's the world), yet failed to expand their understanding in some of the simplest and most obvious things. This is the kind of person who might convince themselves that they are "all about the real world, man", and they don't make up beliefs and rationales whenever something inconvenient pops up. Yet they lie to themselves that there is some justification to literally,- Collectively denying billions of sentient organisms a relatively 'natural life', one that their biochemistry was made in relation to. And instead keeping them locked away for the ENTIRETY of their existence. And then one day their turn comes to get the chopper, and feed some random unphased ape who's a part of humanity. To whom their packed body parts look like the Before image of something delicious. It's like a rapist who doesn't see the suffering, or perhaps, derives greater joy, precisely because suffering is involved, there must even be people who derive a sense of 'domination/superiority'. With the right Context, killing "even a human" is justified, so there's nothing inherently wrong about killing something, in the right context, that is (self-defense, near fatal starvation, etc). So, let me correct anyone here, it is not 'eating some meat' that is objectively immoral, but the fact that it is done in the foulest, most improper contexts, systematically. lol. The red herrings are fun tho. b- They've just recently found this channel and have lived a "personalised/customized" fuzzy, self-deluding type of life so far. Just how the suffering of a human might be "subjective" depending on who sees the suffering, and mainly the capacity of each different individual's system to suffer.
    1
  2. 1