Some monks in the Himalayas believe that murders and the like are reincarnated as vegetarians and vegans.
Plenty of monks around there, even historically,
are vegetarians.
So because humans, intelligent omnivores, totally used their intelligence to figure out what plants they could eat, herbivores select for intelligence? A cow is the perfect example of an herbivore: a dim creature that chews on green things and runs away from scary things. Human intelligence wouldn't have developed on a solely herbivorous diet, because surviving on plants, as a dull creature adapted to digesting leaves, doesn't benefit from a large, complex brain using up a lot of your all-too-scarce energy, nor does it really benefit from simple tools, of the "smash something's head in with a rock" level of complexity.
Do you even read what other people say? Human beings, when eating plants, did not sit around munching on the same leaves all day. They explored new areas, embarked upon
completely unfamiliar continents, and had to figure out for themselves what they can eat, what they can't eat, what
parts of certain plants they could safely eat, how to prepare some to
make them edible, etc., all through experimentation, inference, and cultural transmission of information. A cow does not do any of that. The comparison is bullshit.
Herbivores greatly vary in intelligence, just like carnivores and everything else. Cows are herbivorous, but so are monkeys for the most part.
Seriously, the thought that herbivorous humans must just sit around and eat the same leaves generation after generation is fucking laughable. For that matter, you could make the same terrible argument about carnivores: Why would you need to learn if you're just hunting the same deer every generation?
Honestly though, please try to think before you type.
You know, I didn't think of Roombas when I wrote that, I just used the first entirely mindless object that popped into my head. It even had the benefit of sucking shit off the ground, just like a cow!
In other words, no, you
aren't interested in actually making sense. I mean, a cow mostly wanders around and eats stuff off the ground, so it must have the exact same level of intelligence as a thing with a motor in it that knows to turn around when it bumps things... right? Right?!
Note that I say "secured," to differentiate from some petty philosopher or such proclaiming that "there are totally like, rights man, and people should like, be happy and shit man, and being mean to people is like, bad and shit." Tradition, philosophy, ethical theories, none of these mean anything if there is nothing to enforce them. Humans suffer, and are slaughtered en masse. Therefore, any rights pertaining to such cannot be said to be secured, when they can quite easily be violated by anyone else. Attempting to extend the theory of such "rights" to mindless beasts who owe their very existence to the fact that humans found their ancestors valuable as food, and thus cultivated them, is ridiculous and obscene.
Does that even answer my question?
Also, how many times are you going to say "mindless" before God himself literally comes onto the forum and calls you out on using shitty nonsense buzzwords?
It is to point out how patently ridiculous the notion of animal rights is. Why should we be concerned with the emotional well-being of beasts raised for food, beyond quality concerns?
Except your point hinged on them being mindless, hence the comparison to appliances, not on them being bred for food. You're moving the goalposts. Hell, you're moving them
sideways. If your point is that they're as smart as vacuum cleaners and toasters, that's ridiculous, but fine. If your point is that we shouldn't care about them because caring about them doesn't suit our purposes, then fine. Don't mix and match when it becomes convenient.
There is no reason to be any more concerned with the folly of simple beasts than we are with the well-being of inanimate objects or fictional beings.
I think that I and other people have already responded well enough to this that I don't have to say much of anything other than "euuuuuuuuugh".
You might have a learned revulsion to the idea, but it's just that: learned. You may as well be choosing to believe that's how one should feel, for all it matters to the universe.
Pro tip: All those ideas in your head right now, concerning this and every other thing you've ever thought about anything? Yeah. Those are learned too.
Also, I like the part where you literally say that being an employee of a company is worse than being a slave. Wow. That's bad, even from you.