Because it's incredibly sanitary to eat aliens who carry who know's what disease and parasites which you corpsified on a battlefield? Or are you rounding them up from their homes?Eulogy wrote:1. The increased likelihood of disease. Pathogens have a much easier time infecting organisms that belong to the same species, due to the fact that there are much less barriers to overcome. Transmission between different species means having the proper adpatations, and that is less likely to happen. Then there's stuff like mad cow disease.
Yet, you think that it is fine to eating people from civilized nations which don't happen to be human is A-OK. Remember, they are intelligent here. Have you considered WHY there would be a huge public backlash if our soldiers were frying up guerrillas?2. Eating other humans, among civilized nations, is a long standing taboo. Imagine the public whiplash that would occur if soldiers cooked guerrillas for breakfast.
I wonder what effect it has on the survival of the human race is you convince aliens that we are a race of psychotic space cannibals who have no decency or respect for the dead to the point that we are cooking and eating them?3. Eating your own kind is not a good strategy for the surivival of your species, ESPECIALLY when there is plenty of other food available. Cannibalism tends to be a last resort; i. e. when there is no other food available and you will soon starve to death.
I wonder what it does for the survival of the human race when you convince aliens that human beings are psychotic cannibal space monsters?
After all, killing one of your own for food removes a (potentially) productive member of society, plus there is the emotional duress involved. You don't want to eat your best friend.
Most tribes that engage in cannibalism don't exist anymore. They were either rendered extinct or had their culture conquered and weren't allowed to be cannibals anymore. They aren't something we want to emulate.4. Cultures that engage in cannibalism typically do it as part of a ritual (for example, demonstrating superiority over the other tribe). They are still around, so they don't do this often enough that population or disease becomes an issue.
That's an awful lot of assumptions you are making to justify yourself. Leaving aside whether or not it is cannibalism to eat intelligent beings who aren't human:As for ET eating us, yeah. We don't like to be eaten. But come on, if we are at war with aliens, and we eat them, then obviously we aren't engaging in cannibalism. Besides, suppose that the aliens we're eating turn out not to be that intelligent after all. Or suppose that in the enemy's culture, eating your foe is a sign of superiority and dominance - thus, eating them might lead to the enemy respecting or even liking us (these are aliens, after all. They may not think like we do!).
1) I very much doubt aliens will be engaging in interstellar war with the human race will turn out to be "non-intelligent".
2) Or suppose they are horribly offended by the brutal desecration of their dead and decide that the only response is our extinction? What is your point?