Will Saletan argues that South Korea should legalize the slaughter of dogs:
To comply with Western sensibilities, the Koreans officially banned dog meat. But they don’t enforce the ban, presumably because they don’t share the abhorrence. And why should they? Why exactly is it gross to eat dogs but OK to slaughter pigs, which, by most measures, are smarter? So we’ve started with irrationality compounded by hypocrisy.
Now we have a health problem. According to the article, Korean dog “slaughtering and processing is carried out in dirty environments and poses risks to diners’ health.” Why the dirty environments? Apparently because the formal ban prevents the government from classifying dogs as livestock so it can regulate their slaughter and processing as it does with pigs.[…]
The Korean debate also appeals to my libertarian pragmatism. One reason I’m against abortion bans is that abortions will happen anyway; they’ll just be more dangerous to the born people involved, in addition to killing the unborn. The piety of being able to claim you’ve outlawed abortion doesn’t amount to much next to the harm and suffering you cause by driving abortions underground. I’m for bringing it out in the open. I’d like to believe that if a practice is truly immoral and unnecessary, sunshine will lead to its erosion. In the case of abortion, the latest statistics seem to bear out that belief.
So I guess I’m for 1) getting rid of the hypocritical distinction between dogs and livestock, 2) legalizing and regulating dog meat like other meat, and 3) gradually persuading everybody, including us pious Westerners, to stop eating meat.