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I'll present as an initial argument for veganism/vegetarianism.

(1) Imposing on others is wrong.

You seem to suggest it's (prima facie) wrong to impose on people, such as forcing them to cook different sorts of meals than they want to or are prepared to.

(2) Farming animals and killing them to harvest their meet is an extreme form of imposing.

However wrong it is to force or moralize someone into cooking something they don't want to cook because you desire to eat something other than what they're prepared to cook, it is vastly more wrong to kill to eat what I want.

(C) Therefore, it is wrong to kill animals to eat them. Moreover, since the wrongness of killing is vastly worse than the wrongness of imposing someone to prepare a meal that they don't want to, you are justified to impose on people to cook things they don't want to in order to avoid the vastly more grievous wrong.

You could respond to this by trying to show that "imposing" doesn't apply to animals. This would be done by showing that animals lack moral status. I contend that this almost certainly cannot be done because the features that make us, including senile people and children, moral subjects are present in animals. We can experience the good (perhaps in the form of pain and pleasure, if you're a utilitarian), and have ends and goals; animals can do these as well.

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