Hi! I'm weird, and you can tell. I'm open to answering any questions about myself. Feel free to ask or interact, I'm not shy or stuck up and would love to answer 😁
"it's tasty" isn't a good reason. Its possible (in many places, not all) to eat a vegan diet and be healthier and save more time and money than otherwise. If you live under certain circumstances and cannot, that is okay; that is life. We do not criticize the wolf for hunting.
I see no reason to criticize someone who consumes animal products because they must, and those scenarios can vary. However, we should also recognize that as animals are living things that experience life from their own perspective, we shouldn't harm them if we don't have to.
@claymore_eater@CoyoteColt Okay I'm gonna be the rude person here and cut to the point, you're both selfish and stupid. There is a wrong side of this argument to be on. If you want to eat a hamburger no one can stop you, but maybe don't be defending it proudly like a clown
@Chezetaki@zoeyzetadog@captgouda24 Deceptive, perhaps not, because I understand why you did that. Coercive, yes. Any sort of paying for or bribing people for sex is.
@zoowithnoname@LogicThylacine So that's another thing. If you can't train a big powerful dog to safely interact with other animals or people, don't get one. Because it's awful hard to give your dog a good life if they're not safe to have around others.
Most human-animal relationships in current society are exploitative. The general populace understands this well enough that many of the feelings people have of zoophiles are only a natural procession of their understanding of an animals place in society.
I agree. There are often necessary steps for things to happen in- we can't have a world where people are mad about a "lesser" evil when a greater one is occuring. Animals must first be given more rights and viewed more equally before we can be effective advocates for zoosexuality