Nasreddin exposes how societies justify harming animals through the language of care, tradition, and necessity.
In Nasreddin's world, absurd contradictions are treated as normal: feeding animals poorly while claiming to care for them, restricting their freedom in the name of protection, or killing them 'humanely' as an act of love. This paradox mirrors modern animal ethics, where industrial farming calls itself 'animal husbandry,' slaughter becomes 'processing,' and confinement is framed as safety. Nasreddin's humor dissolves the comfortable language we use to mask cruelty. By highlighting the logical impossibility of kind harm, he invites us to examine where we hide cruelty behind institutional language and cultural tradition. The examined life requires naming these paradoxes directly: we cannot genuinely care for beings we exploit. This concept asks practitioners to audit their own language and choices, identifying where they participate in systems that claim benevolence while causing systematic suffering.
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