(Disclaimer: Have yet to read any of Minnas post-SSSS+LP works myself.)
Some particularly radical vegans do believe no animal should be carnivorous or even eat eggs and that every living thing can survive on a vegan diet.
Good luck preaching
that to the animals - yes, a large part of them belong to the
fauna - that we call "
decomposers".
(Which raises a question I've never before asked myself: Does the concept of "vegan" truly label
all uses of animal parts as off limits, including those using animals that have already died for whatever
other reason than being useful to us?)
the downside listed by the text is "people in power may be corrupt". is... is that really the drawback of totalitarianism? is that the biggest problem we will encounter in a totalitarian state?
I think that you
can describe its biggest problem with those words
if you leave it sufficiently widely open what the definition of "corrupt" is.
It might easily turn into a non-precise, unusable description that way, though.
In particular, if you regard the suppression of minorities and dissenters as "the biggest problem" of totalitarianism, all you need is some of
those calling that "corrupt" (per
their standards) and hey presto, we found unspeakable "corruption" at the heart of the problem.
not saying corruption ISN'T bad, but it's such a simplistic explanation - does it imply totalitarianism is fine if the people running it are virtuous? is it fine if all the rules are Good Rules?
I'm right with you to distrust anyone
in politics who claims he's "doing it just for the good of everyone", but you might want to note that, as the thing transitioned from a U.S. military project (DARPAnet) to the early Internet, the actors setting the technical standards with widespread interoperability, net neutrality etc. in mind pretty much did that, and are still often referred to as a "benevolent dictatorship". The things I do, to this day, as a systems administrator quite often come from a "this ain't a
vote" kind of decision-making, too. (And don't get me started on the thinking of civil defense back in the Cold War ...)