aschie30 wrote: I don't hold it against parents who want to educate their kids, but at the same time, I don't begrudge parents who think it's too graphic for their kids to witness either.
Mhays wrote:aschie30 wrote: I don't hold it against parents who want to educate their kids, but at the same time, I don't begrudge parents who think it's too graphic for their kids to witness either.
To be fair, when you start comparing viewing a pig slaughter to viewing the Holocaust, it doesn't sound the above is what you mean. Nobody at any time, including Monica Eng, suggested that this was something all parents should do with every kid.
I do think it's worth noting that in the case of the pig slaughter, you're showing your kid what happens as a direct result of their choice to consume meat. Empathizing with the Holocaust (or any other tragic event) where your actions clearly had no effect in precipitating the tragedy, is different.aschie30 wrote:My point, so it's clear (and others apparently got it) was that we can understand and emphasize with events -- the Holocaust is one example -- without having experienced it or witnessed it firsthand. Likewise, as MikeG and jimswside stated above, there are other ways to teach your kids about where their meat comes from without having them witness a slaughter firsthand.
dansch wrote:I do think it's worth noting that in the case of the pig slaughter, you're showing your kid what happens as a direct result of their choice to consume meat.aschie30 wrote:My point, so it's clear (and others apparently got it) was that we can understand and emphasize with events -- the Holocaust is one example -- without having experienced it or witnessed it firsthand. Likewise, as MikeG and jimswside stated above, there are other ways to teach your kids about where their meat comes from without having them witness a slaughter firsthand.
I don't. I do think that a respectful appreciation of what is involved in putting a pork chop on the dinner plate is sorely lacking in our society.aschie30 wrote:But that begs the question -- do you think witnessing a slaughter is necessary to consume meat?
dansch wrote:I don't. I do think that a respectful appreciation of what is involved in putting a pork chop on the dinner plate is sorely lacking in our society.
dansch wrote:I don't. I do think that a respectful appreciation of what is involved in putting a pork chop on the dinner plate is sorely lacking in our society.aschie30 wrote:But that begs the question -- do you think witnessing a slaughter is necessary to consume meat?
I think that witnessing slaughter can be a part of making that connection and, in the right context, not unreasonable for a child.
sazerac wrote:Fish, for example is not some fillet on ice; if people realized that I think they would demand better quality.
Crave wrote:The Kori no Suizokukan (Ice Aquarium) in Kesennuma, northeastern Japan, packs about 450 specimens of marine life frozen in large columns of ice bathed in blue light. Some 80 species, including saury, octopuses, crabs, and skipjack, are preserved in lifelike poses. They seem to be swimming in ice.
Opened in 2002 in the Uminoichi seafood market, the Ice Aquarium uses flash-freezing technology to preserve fresh fish unloaded in Kesennuma's port on the Pacific Ocean. Inside, the ambient air is a cool minus 5 degrees F (minus 20 C), and guests have to don parkas to keep warm. There's also a hunk of Antarctic ice on display.
pairs4life wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:I also have a HUGE problem with "we should do" shouted from the rooftops as it were. Sorry but I just don't see how anyone becomes vested with the authority to tell someone they don't know (or even someone they do know unless asked for their opinion)what to do unless they're able to pass it as a law.
But laws are hard to pass.
pairs4life wrote:This reminds me of the offense my animal-eating friends took to my posting this picture of my husband with his birds after a hunt on Facebook a couple of years ago.
Mike G wrote:My kids...have had experience of a wide range of things-- birth, feeding, care, training, exhibition, many smaller things. They understand where the animals go, but I am not convinced that the basic physical mechanics of death would give meaning to something that is otherwise meaningless or even deceptive.
Kennyz wrote:That would be a better analogy if the child were about to eat grandpa and grandpa could live if the child chose to eat something else
meng wrote:My mom still cant believe this is such a big deal since she saw slaughters at the Union Stockyards as a school girl along with hundreds of thousands of other brownies, girl scouts, boy scouts and Chicago Public School kids of that era.
teatpuller wrote:
My dad grew up just south of the stockyards in the late 20s/early30s. He told me they had a visitors center and a viewing area where you could see the cattle being killed with a sledgehammer blow to the head.
Mhays wrote:aschie30 wrote:I mean, we can emphathize with and understand the atrocity and violence in the Holocaust without having witnessed it, right? (Almost a Hitler reference for you.)
Have you been to any of the museum exhibits covering the Holocaust in the area? They are pretty significantly graphic, and children are expected not only to go to them, but to react appropriately to what they see.
LAZ wrote: Should children be explicitly exposed to the end of the life cycle before they're given similar lessons in its beginnings?
On the farm, kids see both as a matter of course. City kids may need more preparation. But maybe not. I saw my dog have puppies when I was 5 or 6 -- I didn't see the part that came before that, but the concept of "heat" had been explained to me in simple terms (mainly having to do with why sometimes our poodle had to wear little pants in the house and should not be let out into the yard unsupervised). And although I was much older before I actually witnessed an animal being killed, I did accompany my grandmother to the live-poultry store, watch her choice of chicken being taken to the back, feel the still-warm package that was brought out afterward, and then see her dismember the corpse, with -- to bring things back to life's beginnings again -- the immature eggs inside.
Diannie wrote:I wonder if waiting too long is not more traumatic than just making it a fact of life from babyhood. By the time I was 7, I anthropomorphized fuzzy bunnies and other creatures. I wanted to hug them and pet them and had I not been exposed to them as food, I think I might have been quite upset about killing them. I think that as a young child I was more able to emotionally separate food creatures from pet creatures since that's how I'd always thought of them.
LAZ wrote:Disney has a lot to answer for.