It seems to be some kind of event for kids to learn about the practice of raising cattle, and the meat business.
So it is clear that the goat was never intended to become a pet. Still, I can't imagine this is the first time that there were upset kids at the fair. That place must be a tear factory.
We raise our own chickens for meat, my young kids help. They eat meat.
I don’t understand why you think lovingly care and raising your own meat would make you a vegan? We use these moments to teach respect and gratefulness even for animals we are about to slaughter, but not in a pagan pantheistic way.
Kids get it pretty quickly frankly. They have much less “baggage” and No Agenda.
> I don’t understand why you think lovingly care and raising your own meat would make you a vegan?
Wow, he said that, huh? Nice straw-man!
Personally, I can see how entering a goat into a contest and then changing your mind and then the police come to your house and steal the goat because it sold to a rancher for a pittance could be traumatic and align you against the meat industry for life.
You’re certainly right. More provocatively, raising children on a plantation worked by slaves doesn’t make them abolitionists either. It might even effectively indoctrinate them against it since they can say how well they treated and how much respect they had for the slaves.
Being raised within something can put you at a worse position to scrutinize it.
https://www.shastadistrictfairandeventcenter.com/junior-live...
It seems to be some kind of event for kids to learn about the practice of raising cattle, and the meat business.
So it is clear that the goat was never intended to become a pet. Still, I can't imagine this is the first time that there were upset kids at the fair. That place must be a tear factory.