Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Broomstick »

Rye wrote:
Broomstick wrote: Just as parent-child incest is arguably more problematic than sibling incest because the child is in no position to either refuse or give meaningful consent, a domestic animal is not really in a position to refuse sex, or give meaningful consent when trained to obey human commands without question. If you take that position then bestiality between humans and wild animals might be ethically neutral (assuming no coercion) but not between humans and their chattel.
What about the points I raised against this, though? If you smear peanut butter on your genitals and have a dog lick it off, the dog's going to enjoy it, so are you, and its consent in non-sexual affection is never considered an important thing. Is there something intrinsically different about sexual affection when the outcomes are broadly similar?
If you offer a child candy in exchange for said child taking off his/her clothes while you stand 10 feet away and masturbate, does the fact the child is enjoying the candy make all that OK?

Comparing bestiality to child molestation is problematic, they are two different acts. I do think, however, that using peanut butter to "trick" a dog into performing a sex act on a human is a bit dodgy at best.

The other problem with training an animal to engage in sex with humans is that the animal is likely to not understand that only a minority of humans desire that form of contact, setting up a situation where an animal unwittingly attempts to perform acts upon people who are not zoophilliac and who regard such things as an icky, disgusting, unwanted intrusion upon their person. Increasing the likelihood of such an occurrence is not a moral good.
The last bit, I guess, is you advocating vegetarianism too?
Hell no - I'm a confirmed omnivore with a liking for animal flesh. We evolved with an ability to eat animal protein, doing so is not immoral although how we obtain animal flesh for eating purposes may or may not be immoral.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

Why are the rights of animals so valued, anyway? We eat them, we breed them in lousy conditions so they can be systematically slaughtered to fill our gullets, and we kill them for fun. Would the arguments for animal rights re: zoophilia (yuck) be as valid if the animals we were talking about were reptiles, amphibians, fish or invertebrate mollusks?
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

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Shroom Man 777 wrote:Why are the rights of animals so valued, anyway? We eat them, we breed them in lousy conditions so they can be systematically slaughtered to fill our gullets, and we kill them for fun.
I have never killed an animal "for fun". I have killed them to eat them, I have killed pests that were either threatening me or my food supply, but I have never killed an animal for fun. I would expect the humans that do so are actually a minority.
Would the arguments for animal rights re: zoophilia (yuck) be as valid if the animals we were talking about were reptiles, amphibians, fish or invertebrate mollusks?
From my viewpoint? Yes. (How does one have sex with a mollusk? I'm sure the answer is on the internet somewhere... somewhere that I most likely don't want to go...).

But the argument against bestiality isn't just for the benefit of the animals, there is also the human element to be concerned about.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Plekhanov »

Broomstick wrote:I'd say one big ethical issue with bestiality is the asymmetrical power dynamics. Just as parent-child incest is arguably more problematic than sibling incest because the child is in no position to either refuse or give meaningful consent, a domestic animal is not really in a position to refuse sex, or give meaningful consent when trained to obey human commands without question. If you take that position then bestiality between humans and wild animals might be ethically neutral (assuming no coercion) but not between humans and their chattel.
Do horses consent to having saddles strapped on their backs, having metal bits shoved in their moves and having people ride them? Do horses consent to being made to jump over fences at the risk of breaking a leg and then being shot?

If riding a 'chattel' horse is moral then why isn't having sex with a chattel horse?
Broomstick wrote:If you offer a child candy in exchange for said child taking off his/her clothes while you stand 10 feet away and masturbate, does the fact the child is enjoying the candy make all that OK?
People habitually do things to animals that it is almost universally seen as deeply wrong to do to children.
The other problem with training an animal to engage in sex with humans is that the animal is likely to not understand that only a minority of humans desire that form of contact, setting up a situation where an animal unwittingly attempts to perform acts upon people who are not zoophilliac and who regard such things as an icky, disgusting, unwanted intrusion upon their person. Increasing the likelihood of such an occurrence is not a moral good.
You are really reaching here, lock the animal up problem solved.
Broomstick wrote:
Shroom Man 777 wrote:Why are the rights of animals so valued, anyway? We eat them, we breed them in lousy conditions so they can be systematically slaughtered to fill our gullets, and we kill them for fun.
I have never killed an animal "for fun". I have killed them to eat them, I have killed pests that were either threatening me or my food supply, but I have never killed an animal for fun. I would expect the humans that do so are actually a minority.
But you do kill them for fun, you don't need to eat meat, people can survive perfectly well without doing so. You eat meat not because you need to but because you like the taste of meat, because you enjoy eating it.

If it's moral to kill an animal because you enjoy the taste of it's flesh then why is it immoral to have sex with it?
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Pick »

Male humans use fish for an oral sex partner occasionally, Shroom.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Rye »

Broomstick wrote:If you offer a child candy in exchange for said child taking off his/her clothes while you stand 10 feet away and masturbate, does the fact the child is enjoying the candy make all that OK?
No. We still do far worse things to animals as a matter of course.
Comparing bestiality to child molestation is problematic, they are two different acts. I do think, however, that using peanut butter to "trick" a dog into performing a sex act on a human is a bit dodgy at best.
I'd agree as a matter of intuitive morality, but I can't say exactly why logically.
Hell no - I'm a confirmed omnivore with a liking for animal flesh. We evolved with an ability to eat animal protein, doing so is not immoral although how we obtain animal flesh for eating purposes may or may not be immoral.
Yeah, the normal ways are through killing and suffering, which are a damn sight worse than sex.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

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Plekhanov wrote:
Broomstick wrote:I'd say one big ethical issue with bestiality is the asymmetrical power dynamics. Just as parent-child incest is arguably more problematic than sibling incest because the child is in no position to either refuse or give meaningful consent, a domestic animal is not really in a position to refuse sex, or give meaningful consent when trained to obey human commands without question. If you take that position then bestiality between humans and wild animals might be ethically neutral (assuming no coercion) but not between humans and their chattel.
Do horses consent to having saddles strapped on their backs, having metal bits shoved in their moves and having people ride them? Do horses consent to being made to jump over fences at the risk of breaking a leg and then being shot?

If riding a 'chattel' horse is moral then why isn't having sex with a chattel horse?
Oh, I see, you think I actually am arguing from personal conviction here. Someone asked what a possible basis for bestiality being immoral was, and I suggested one. Go back and re-read what I wrote where do I say that it is my personal view of how the world works?

As far as the horses, though - I have seen training where a completely unlearned foal is guided to having something on its back, something in its mouth, up to having a person get on its back, without the animal being traumatized or physically restrained. As far as jumping fences - horses will do that on their own, also risking breaking a leg. Oh, noes! Making a horse run, something it is biologically inclined to do even when safe, well-fed, and happy. As opposed to having sex outside its own species, which is not something I've ever heard of a wild horse doing, or even a domestic horse doing of its own volition as its own original idea.
Broomstick wrote:If you offer a child candy in exchange for said child taking off his/her clothes while you stand 10 feet away and masturbate, does the fact the child is enjoying the candy make all that OK?
People habitually do things to animals that it is almost universally seen as deeply wrong to do to children.
That doesn't mean people don't see it as wrong to do to animals. It is seen as bad whether you're beating an animal or a child, starving an animal or a child, etc.
The other problem with training an animal to engage in sex with humans is that the animal is likely to not understand that only a minority of humans desire that form of contact, setting up a situation where an animal unwittingly attempts to perform acts upon people who are not zoophilliac and who regard such things as an icky, disgusting, unwanted intrusion upon their person. Increasing the likelihood of such an occurrence is not a moral good.
You are really reaching here, lock the animal up problem solved.
Given how few people see capable of locking their animals up for any reason, much less because their dog might actually fuck the neighbor instead of just the neighbor's leg, I don't see that as "solved".
Broomstick wrote:But you do kill them for fun, you don't need to eat meat, people can survive perfectly well without doing so. You eat meat not because you need to but because you like the taste of meat, because you enjoy eating it.
Actually, given that I am allergic to most legumes, surviving in a healthful manner without meat might in fact be nearly impossible for me. And meat/animal products are the only natural source of B12, lack of which ranges from very bad to fatal in results. The only reason people can survive a lifetime without eating meat or milk (and milk is just as exploitative as meat) is because modern technology enables us to find an alternate source of B12. Yes, we eat more meat than we have to, but arguably some consumption of animals is necessary for healthy human life.
If it's moral to kill an animal because you enjoy the taste of it's flesh then why is it immoral to have sex with it?
The same reason it's immoral to slowly beat an animal to death even if it is moral to eat meat. It's not moral to cause avoidable suffering.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Pick »

Actually, inter-species boning in the wild isn't as rare as people think. For instance, the Hybrid Iguana came about only recently and that was natural, as are a few recorded polar/grizzly bear hybrids. And Beefalo (don't blame me for the name) were recorded in the 1700s, same deal, not human-induced. And the Toast of Botswana wasn't intentional. And black/white rhino crosses exist.

Not saying that justifies anything, but wild animals will, with at least some frequency, mount others of different species. (Anyone seen that picture of the giraffe trying to have sex with a cow? Priceless.)
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Rye »

Mules are an obvious example of horses boning outside their species. It may be immoral to beat an animal to death, but that wouldn't apply to bringing an animal to orgasm, and it would prohibit eating meat for non-survival purposes. That's avoidable suffering right there.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

Pick wrote:Male humans use fish for an oral sex partner occasionally, Shroom.
I didn't need to know that. :P
Broomstick wrote:But the argument against bestiality isn't just for the benefit of the animals, there is also the human element to be concerned about.
The mental sanity of the zoophile is a better way of pursuing arguements against zoophilia.

The "benefit of the animals" or animal rights, in my own view, is a more tenuous thing since, really, our societies aren't really geared for the benefit of the animals - but practically the exact opposite. Hell, "animal rights" is a concern that's only mostly seen in Western societies anyway. The same Western societies that mass murder chickens to process them into horrible fastfood that exceed human nutritious needs and are served only for the purposes of gluttony.

Being killed 'en masse to be consumed by people who are exceeding their nutrition needs is a graver concern for our fuzzy little animal friends than being used as living fishy fleshlights, anyway.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Samuel »

What animals are we talking about anyway? What is the usual ones people are... interested in?
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

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Typically horses and dogs, from what I can tell. Presumably because they're readily accessible, usually with the human participant being the female.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Pick »

Actually, zoophilia rates are higher for men than for women.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Darth Yoshi »

Well, to be fair, it's an easy misconception, since most bestiality porn features women, but that's just because porn in general caters to men.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by loomer »

The most common animals are, as far as I'm aware, horses, donkeys, sheep, goats, and dogs, worldwide, with some usage of chickens and fish, and the odd cat being thrown in for good measure. Mind you, I don't understand how anyone could want to bugger a cat. It's already a barely calm ball of furious claws and fur that wants to rip your face off - how angry will it be if you do, and do you really want to risk claws 'there'?
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Zwinmar »

Well the first question that has to be answered is: Are animals subject to the same ethics as humans? If not, then what ethics apply to animals, if any.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Batman »

Given that we routinely DO eat animals while cannibalism is mostly frowned upon I think we can safely assume that no, the same ethics are NOT applied.
As for what ethics DO apply, as already pointed out, we routinely raise animals for the express purpose of processing them for food or using them in lab experiments so I don't see how people having sex with them (which the animal might actually enjoy) is any worse.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Solauren »

Here's the best arguement I can think of;

Inter-species Disease adaptation and mutation.

Consider;
Most animals are covered in germs that are a part of their existence. Some are predatory, some symbiotic, and others are just hanging out until they can go after the animals shit.

If you were to start mating on a regular basis with one of those animals, above and beyond normal contact, you're running a very high risk of some of those diseases migrating onto you. Eventually, some of those disease will adapt and evolve to affect humans.

While this is already a fairly present concern, especially with the consumption of meat, we do take steps to avoid it (i.e we cook meat, which kills most bacteria and virus's).

There is no such protection during sexual intercourse with an animal.

In either direction.

A human could easily pass on a disease to an animal that would not be normally transmitted, which could adapt, and cause problems.

Let me put it this way; Imagine the results of someone screwing their dog literally, then being an unethical breeder to boot, and transmitting AIDS. Now, it adapts to living in Dogs, isn't to bad for them, and the new strain is still really bad for humans. The Dogs are now transmitting AIDS when they breed. They transmit it when they bite or drool as well.

Imagine that. Dogs that could give you AIDS with a big, sloppy kiss.

And worse yet, you wouldn't know where you got it from, and it might be years before the source is ID'd.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Serafina »

Of course, you already live with those animals - any disease that could jump the species barrier would propably do so, anyway. And STDs are normally pretty species-specific.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Oskuro »

I think the greatest complication is that many of these animals want to have sex, even with humans. How is it immoral to grant them something they want?

Anyone who has had a house pet knows how eager they are to hump anything. I consider it immoral to force any creature to have sex (and some smaller animals can get horrible injuries from forced penetration), but I very much doubt a dog in heat would complain at its sexual partner being a human.

Now someone will surely bring up: What if a kid wants to have sex? Do you give it to him? I'd say, don't be an idiot, kids are immature and not ready for a sexual encounter, but, guess what?, infant animals aren't either*! We're talking about adult animals here, creatures who are perfectly capable of handling the sexual act.


*I don't have the source available, but I read once that infant animals could develop mental trauma if subjected to sexual intercourse too early.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by loomer »

Solauren wrote: There is no such protection during sexual intercourse with an animal. In either direction.
I'm pretty sure condoms still work for men doing the nasty with their pets/wards, and with those used correctly it ends up being no more likely to cause transmission than wrestling with a dog is.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Solauren »

LordOskuro wrote:I think the greatest complication is that many of these animals want to have sex, even with humans. How is it immoral to grant them something they want?

Anyone who has had a house pet knows how eager they are to hump anything. I consider it immoral to force any creature to have sex (and some smaller animals can get horrible injuries from forced penetration), but I very much doubt a dog in heat would complain at its sexual partner being a human.

Now someone will surely bring up: What if a kid wants to have sex? Do you give it to him? I'd say, don't be an idiot, kids are immature and not ready for a sexual encounter, but, guess what?, infant animals aren't either*! We're talking about adult animals here, creatures who are perfectly capable of handling the sexual act.


*I don't have the source available, but I read once that infant animals could develop mental trauma if subjected to sexual intercourse too early.
Um, household animals are attempting to show "I'm the boss" on what they are having sex with.

Case in point, my mom's Dauchsund is always pounding the shit out of this stuffed tiger he has. Both literally and figuratively, yet he doesn't try to hump other dogs.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Pick »

Don't personify behavior without a firm grounding. Your perception of what your dog wants is not necessarily what it's thinking. He may be intimidated by other dogs, whereas an unmoving item he is familiar with does not cause him the same distress. I don't know if that's right, but that's my point. Multiple explanations exist and you can't base a case around your supposition.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Solauren »

Mom/Dad's dog, not mine. (Our's tries to hump other dogs on occasion, and his bed, but not people or inanimate objects).

No, since Lucky broke his leg, he has stopped trying to hump other dogs and people (Joke reason: Ever see a Dachshund try to hump a German Shepard that wasn't co-operating?), but still beats on those stuffed toys.

There is actually some concern he might try to hump my nephews (they are 1 and 2 and a half respectively), but so far, all he does is play ball with them, and roll over for belly rubs.
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Re: Bestiality/Zoophilia: Ethics of

Post by Rye »

Solauren wrote:Here's the best arguement I can think of;

Inter-species Disease adaptation and mutation.
How large are the risks, especially using normal provisions like washing, condoms and such?
Imagine that. Dogs that could give you AIDS with a big, sloppy kiss.
Sounds pretty unlikely.
EBC|Fucking Metal|Artist|Androgynous Sexfiend|Gozer Kvltist|
Listen to my music! http://www.soundclick.com/nihilanth
"America is, now, the most powerful and economically prosperous nation in the country." - Master of Ossus
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