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Why I Am a Vegetarian / An Address Delivered Before the Chicago Vegetarian Society

Chapter 2: Preface.
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The speaker presents a concise defense of vegetarianism grounded in ethics, health, and moral philosophy, urging compassion and solidarity with nonhuman animals while condemning routine meat consumption as cruel and unnecessary. He describes a personal shift from craving flesh to moral revulsion and improved wellbeing, situates dietary reform alongside other social progress movements that once met fierce resistance, and marshals scientific and analogical reasoning to show plant-based sustenance is viable. The address anticipates common objections and calls for continued reflection and social change to overcome ingrained habits of inconsideration toward other species.

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Title: Why I Am a Vegetarian

Author: J. Howard Moore

Release date: February 16, 2020 [eBook #61396]
Most recently updated: October 17, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by L. Reeves from scans generously made available
by the Internet Archive

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHY I AM A VEGETARIAN ***

Why I Am a Vegetarian

An Address Delivered Before the Chicago Vegetarian Society

By J. Howard Moore

Frances L. Dusenberry
McVicker’s Theatre Building
Chicago


Preface.

The human race is like a snake—it sheds. Ever and anon, as the ages bloom, old forms of thought are superseded by intellectual bran-news. Shrines at which one generation adores become to the succeeding desolate and despised.

This little brochure has a mission. It is not a formidable one, but it is. It goes out with the hope that it may help, if ever so infinitesimally, in ridding the human of that terrific instinct of inconsideration toward the sub-human races. Solidarity is its plea, human and universal.

It would be inexcusable to suppose it to be exhaustive. It is not even defensive. It is a projectile, and projectiles do not apologize.

It intends to be followed.

J. H. M.

Chicago, May, 1895.

“What more advance can mortals make in sin?
Deaf to the calf that lies beneath the knife,
Looks up and from the butcher begs her life.
Deaf to the harmless kid, who, ere he dies,
All efforts to procure thy pity tries,
And imitates in vain thy children’s cries.”

— Anonymous.

“No flocks that range the valley free,
To slaughter I condemn;
Taught by the Power that pities me,
I learn to pity them.”

— Goldsmith.

“It is a vulgar error to regard meat in any form as necessary to human life.”

— Sir Henry Thompson.

“The anthropoids and all the quadrumana derive their alimentation from fruits, grains, and other succulent vegetal substances, and the strict analogy between the structure of those animals and that of man clearly demonstrates his frugivorous nature.”

— Owen.

“Does it not shame you to mingle blood and murder with nature’s beneficent fruits? Other carnivora you call savage and ferocious—lions, tigers and serpents—while yourselves come behind them in no species of barbarity. And yet for them murder is the only means of sustenance, whereas to you it is a superfluous luxury and crime.”

— Plutarch.