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“Humane Pesticides Are Massively Morally Urgent” by Bentham’s Bulldog

Published 1 week, 6 days ago
Description

I have lots of radical views about insects. I think probably most expected happiness and misery in the world is experienced by insects, and that our actions often have much more significant moral impacts on bugs than on people. But in this article, I’m not going to defend anything radical. My thesis here is very moderate: I think we should try to make pesticides kill insects less painfully.

Every year, quadrillions of insects are killed or harmed with pesticides—3.5 quadrillion, according to one estimate. This is about 30,000 times more than the number of people who have ever lived in human history. In the best cases, deaths take minutes or hours as the insects are slowly poisoned to death. In other worse cases, death takes days as the insects are left unable to shed their own skin and essentially crushed to death from the inside. In still other cases, insects starve to death as their guts malfunction. This is likely to be very painful.

It is plausible that many insects can suffer. When benchmarks are created to assess pain in animals, insects consistently meet most of the criteria, having nociceptors, responding to painkillers, demonstrating associative learning, and sometimes displaying [...]

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First published:
April 17th, 2026

Source:
https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/qFAoZKpL5aRdqyBLb/humane-pesticides-are-massively-morally-urgent

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Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

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Images from the article:

Hermit crab with large, spiky, brown protective shell.

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