this post was submitted on 26 Dec 2023
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This isn’t all that surprising; up until very recently, livestock supply was precarious enough that the utility function of domesticated animals outweighed their meat function; you eat a a cow, it can’t be used for milk or pulling equipment, you eat a chicken, no more eggs from that chicken, you eat a sheep, no more wool from that sheep, and dead animals can’t reproduce to make new ones. So meat consumption was probably limited to special events and desperation calories.
Yeah, from what ik generally it'd be the older animals, much older than we kill them today and very much restricted to events where a large group beyond the immediate owners gets to eat (e.g. chiefly feasts in the Scottish highlands; saints' feastdays in much of Europe or various sacrifices in Rome or Judah). The whole idea of breeding and raising exclusively to butcher comes with markets export of goods for consumption in the cities. There's also just more concern in general for the animal because you're relying on them for various other tasks (and just generally, its easier to deal with a contented animal than an angry one)
Saito in Karl Marx's Ecosocialism actually shows that Marx had thoughts on the 'modern', rapid, meat-focused, industrialised animal agriculture, as it was developing: