bees do not suffer from humans harvesting their honey, as they produce it to a level of excess that they cannot hope to use.
not only that, but without people deliberately breeding them for honey, they would have died out by now.
this especially goes towards you vegans who don’t eat honey thinking it’s animal abuse. don’t go out and buy agave nectar, which is so frequently made using inhuman labour policies. use honey, the best way to save bees.
Oh my god when will these posts end
Producing honey is an exhaustive process for bees, and a single teaspoon represents the life’s work of 12 individuals. As with any animal product, honey production means that bees are seen as commodities rather than autonomous beings. Bees are very complex creatures, who experience pain, are capable of emotional responses as well as abstract thought and have extremely sophisticated social systems. We know that honeybees process massive amounts of information about flowers, locations, and the behavior and physiological status of other bees in the hive, not to mention their ages, weather, and the seasons. They are not senseless automatons whose needs and preferences don’t need to be taken into account.
Despite this fact, bees are often cruelly treated and exploited for profit by the honey industry. Queen bees are often artificially inseminated and many beekeepers cut off their wings to prevent them leaving the hive. It is standard practice for commercial operations to take all or most of the honey bees produce, and replace it with a sugar syrup substitute. When harvesting, beekeepers often use smoke to purposely disorient and panic bees, and some will even burn entire hives during winter to reduce costs. Even putting aside the harm caused to bees, making a profit out of the life’s work of other beings is exploitation, and harvesting honey is quite simply taking something which isn’t ours to use.
Many people are willing to overlook welfare concerns because it is popularly thought that consuming honey helps bees and the environment. The honey industry only boosts numbers of captive bees, however, when in fact, wild bees are better pollinators, are better for the environment and are actually being put at risk because of captive bees competing for the same food. Many diseases that have only ever existed in domestic bees are also spreading to wild bee populations and placing them in very real danger, this is a direct result of the commercial production of honey. If you are interested in helping bee populations, you can provide shelter for bees without taking their honey or making a profit from them. This, as well as planting and maintaining bee friendly flowers in your garden, is one of the most effective ways to genuinely help bees, rather than just helping their owners.
Oh and keep in mind, no one needs honey or agave, it isn’t the case that if you don’t buy honey you’re buying agave instead. These are entirely unnecessary, luxury items, both of which do nothing to help wild pollinators. Honey is not “the best way to save bees” as I have already demonstrated, and what’s more, the bees being kept to produce honey are not even endangered. It is the wild pollinators put at risk by pesticides and the honey industry itself which should be our primary concern, but all people seem to actually care about is the possibility that they won’t get to eat their honey nut cheerios anymore.