MOOTRIX
On a Turkish farm, cows produce an average of 27 litres of milk instead of the usual 22 litres.
On this farm, the cows can see green pastures thanks to VR glasses they wear and the farmer makes them listen to classical music. This keeps the cows calm and balanced and allows them to produce more milk.
What future does this foresee?
Cows of the future will have no legs, float in a tank, be drugged and listen to elevator music in the Facebook metaverse.
Many people think that film and virtual reality will eat up reality, but it seems to be proven wrong as virtuality gives an extra 5 litres of real milk.
What is the question?
Is globalisation and greed to blame for the Cow Matrix? Or was it just the ordinary farmer trying to boost his cow’s self-esteem? With what? By how much more milk they are able to produce compared to their fellow farmers on other farms?
Did the quality of life for these cows really improve? Will this virtuality for them never be exposed? And do they really think they are grazing on a green pasture?
Do the cows have the right to live on green pasture or only to the conditions of factory farming, which gives them the illusion of a higher milk yield? Or do they not get that either, and then we settle for less milk and save the price of VR glasses?
Cows seem to be able to have a freer experience in their instinct world than humans, but when can with humans do the same? Humans have consciousness and we know we are going to die so we have death consciousness. But cows, as far as we know, do not. This makes grazing on green pasture much easier to plant in their minds without the danger of being caught than in ours ” For Now! “.
What is wrong with that? Or is there one at all?
Beyond a point, economics will require them to have their legs cut off, put in tanks, drugged and live out their lives in the Facebook metaverse with VR goggles on their heads.
If all the gesture we can do for nature is 1 VR goggle, we have long ago violated the basic rights of these animals. It’s not humane, it’s not “cattle quality” of life that they live.
Soon they will be deprived of their legs, but already they are only there to stand on. They might as well have a better quality of life floating in a tank. At least then they’ll be “aquatic animals”, but now they live as plants.
The possibilities for cruelty seem endless. Factory farming, the way we produce meat, is not only an animal rights problem, but also a serious human rights, ethical and moral problem.
The postmodern world and life in it is not humane, in which we are paid for with VR glasses. This is what technology can give us, in exchange for enduring the conditions of a group holiday and we turning channel on TV.
If we act now it is we lated too already, but now as sooner than tomorrow.
antielonmusk.com