this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2025
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Science Memes

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[–] sad_detective_man@leminal.space 0 points 1 day ago (2 children)

love how some people's plan for survival ecological collapse is just to craft products (that they assume are) without the endangered ecology. like, good job the assignment was to save the damn bees but yeah I'm sure all the plants will be able to survive if we smear them with synthetic honey.

[–] logicbomb@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I assume this "bee-free honey" is more about veganism than about ecology.

[–] sad_detective_man@leminal.space 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

that would make sense. I'm unsure of whether it's helpful, but I forgot that goal of veganism could extend to domestic bees as well. are there any vegans who can clue me in on the thought process regarding bees?

[–] bss03@infosec.pub 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

The way I had it described to me was that veganism is against the exploitation of all animals, including "stealing" honey from a hive.

But, "vegan" is a label at least as malleable as "Christian".

To some people, this Foie Gras might be vegan, if they can't find the exploitation. To others, large-scale U.S. produce might be non-vegan since it depends on exploitative labor (humans are animals) practices. To a few, mussels are vegan because there's no mind to suffer or be exploited. To a very few, plants that show a "pain" response are non-vegan, even if that response happens over time, as long as it has a clear trigger in human interference (which is expliotation due to the "pain"), despite the complete lack of a nervous system, which humans (and other animals) use to feel pain.

Anyway, I'm NOT a vegan, but I do try to limit my meat consumption. It just feels like the amount I used to eat isn't really globally sustainable, and I take up too many resources in to many other ways, too.

ooh yeah that does sound like dumb fake concern. the relationship we have with bees is ideally pretty mutually beneficial and outside of the framework of an idea like theft. Christianity does seem like a good analoge for it. like there's people who obviously don't get the ethics of it beyond a aesthetic performance.

somebody else in the comments just told me that in industrial honey farms will do things like clip the wings of queens to prevent them from moving colonies away so I can understand the concern there though. or that domestic bee colonies disrupt local wild ones which is also valid.

I'm of the same mindset as you then. something I realized a while back is there are human ways of doing agriculture but the demands of capitalism have forced us to take the exploitation of animals and workers to insane body horror places. I don't think I can live animal product free but I absolutely respect people who do and I'm definitely invested in changing our economy into one that doesn't require infinite growth at the cost of all this suffering.

[–] Tar_alcaran@sh.itjust.works 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Saving "the bees" is easy, since bees in general are doing fine.

Saving solitary wild bees the real task, and that's much harder.

I don't think they are. I could have swore that the looming death of most pollinators was on the horizon.