If you’re a vegan in the US but you pay tax, part of your tax contribution goes toward livestock farming subsidies. So in effect you are forced to support unethical treatment of animals.

So I have to wonder-- have vegans attempted to fight for the right to be fully vegan and thus requested to opt-out of those subsidies? In principle, it seems a vegan should be able to tick on a box on their tax forms saying “I was vegan this whole tax year” and the result should be a tax credit that reimburses their share of the livestock subsidies the gov pays every year using public money.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    The US taxpayer is forced to subsidize many things they may find indefensibly immoral, but there is really no recourse for that.

    On the one hand, that sucks. On the other, allowing them to pick and choose which subsidies to give their money to sets a dangerous precedent. While one person could refuse to subsidize livestock farming, another could refuse to subsidize public healthcare, education or transit.

    I’m not sure there’s a pathway to letting the taxpayer choose what to support that results in universally good things, especially in the modern political climate.

    Edit: if it’s any consolation, a truly miniscule amount of your personal tax payment goes to these subsidies. While I understand that’s still reprehensible from a principled perspective, your reimbursement would likely be in the number of cents. I’d be surprised if the amount cleared even $10. These subsidies mostly work because of the scale of the collection, not the individual contribution.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      1 year ago

      Not sure I would easily say that’s a slippery slope because veganism is different. Strictly speaking, one is not truly a vegan if they pay US tax because they are in fact contributing to animal exploitation. So vegans would be demanding a right to be vegan. Whereas your other examples don’t have a similar effect of denying someone to be who they want (the right to self determination in the declaration of human rights, IIRC). If someone tried to invent being opposed to public healthcare, they would be at odds with human rights to start with and would have to start with denying themselves public healthcare. These positions would be too extreme to defend, unlike defending one’s right to be vegan. Education is also a human right and they’re not overturning that easily.

      EDIT: fwiw, I dug up the self-determination right I was fuzzy on, from the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Part I, Art.1:

      1. All peoples have the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.

      That said, I’m not sure if that concretely allows a vegan to derive a right to be vegan. Perhaps it’s too abstract to be useful.

      • growsomethinggood ()
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        131 year ago

        (Religious) pacifists are required to fund wars under this system already. No one would argue for higher protections for vegans than religion, which is already better protected constitutionally in the US. So unfortunately I think this is a non-starter for legal determination. Morally speaking, you could have that conversation, but it wouldn’t slot in to our existing framework as it stands.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Values and principles are largely subjective. It’s only through overwhelming, collective agreement that some things become so valuable as to be declared human rights, even when it’s staunchly evident they are, e.g. the rights of LGBT people.

        I think a lot more political debate similar to this has been voiced and argued about parentless adults being required to pay taxes to support schools. While I think one could easily argue that public schooling is a greater good all must contribute to in order to better society, (though I could easily find you people who would vehemently disagree for some cockamamie reason) there simply isn’t that sort of collective thinking about veganism.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          1 year ago

          I think a lot more political debate similar to this has been voiced and argued about parentless adults being required to pay taxes to support schools.

          I would not imagine they would be able to counter the point that they themselves had a right to attend school and so it would be a bit rich that they attempt to defund something that they at least had the option to benefit from (and likely did go to school in most cases).

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        I think you might be able to argue academically that vegans have a right not to subsidize livestock industries there, but let’s be honest for a second and see that this clause is entirely violated every goddamn day in the US for many many groups of marginalized people.

        And I don’t see that changing very soon either.

      • @Okokimup
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        21 year ago

        That said, I’m not sure if that concretely allows a vegan to derive a right to be vegan.

        Jesum fuck, it’s this kind of gatekeeping that keeps people from making better decisions because you make them think it has to be all or nothing.

  • @HansSlonzok
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    181 year ago

    If you’re a pacifist in the US but you pay tax, part of your tax contribution goes toward army subsidies.

    • A huge part. Much larger than farm subsidies, most of which go to non-livestock farming, such as corn and soybeans.

      I hate greenbeans. I don’t want any of my tax dollars going to stinking greenbean farming.