I don’t think I have the time or inclination to explain the entire history of predator and prey to you, but if you type in those two words, you’re going to learn a whole lot about a very long history of carnivores and omnivores eating meat.
Carnivores are meat eaters and omnivores eat many things, btw.
Humans as a predator, are biologically and historically intended to eat prey, the cow. Or pig, or whatever animal.
Look it up, you can choose nearly any animal you are familiar with, and they will fit into the food chain somewhere as an iteration of predator or prey.
You have a lot to learn, that’ll be fun for you!
You are just keep switching the subject of intention for your convenience. Milk is not intended to be… humans are intended to… If you only consider the intention of the consumer, of course it is always intended to consume whatever is nutritious. The logic flaw is in the case of milk you suddenly switch to consider the intention of the producer which is the cows. Are you doing this intentionally (pun intended) or is it a blind spot for you because you hate milk?
If you keep asking questions about different topics, you’re going to receive answers about different topics.
That doesn’t mean I’m being inconsistent, it means that I’m consistently answering your inconsistent questions.
Your newest topic is based on the false premise that I am considering the intention of cows, which I am not.
You’re making that up and then following up your false claim by asking me why I believe cows have intention because it’s an indefensible point.
You got confused four or five comments ago and you’re trying to use disingenuous, obscure questioning and false assertions in an attempt to ignore and draw attention away from the clear answers you’ve received that logically show you why meat is biologically and historically intended to be eaten by carnivores and omnivores.
It’s not working, but it is funny that you keep trying, so go wild.
Hmm, I see. How about you go ahead and clarify for me whose intention you’re talking about in either cases?