ChatterBank1 min ago
Why Does The World Tolerate This Cruelty?
30 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/wo rld-asi a-44307 396
how much "research" do they need to do? barbarians.
how much "research" do they need to do? barbarians.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.From your own link TTT.
//Figures from charity Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) show that many countries other than Japan still catch whales.//
//Norway and Iceland still hunt whales for meat, the former rejecting the moratorium and the latter only partially agreeing.//
So if they don't try to hide behind the "research" banner are they less barbaric?
//Figures from charity Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) show that many countries other than Japan still catch whales.//
//Norway and Iceland still hunt whales for meat, the former rejecting the moratorium and the latter only partially agreeing.//
So if they don't try to hide behind the "research" banner are they less barbaric?
Ummmm and Emmie. Only one consonant between them. It's like two women arriving at a party wearing the same frock.
OK, girls, I'm being facetious. But neither of you are answering my question. Are we talking about the suffering of individual pigs and minke whales? Or the survival of pigs and minkes as a species?
OK, girls, I'm being facetious. But neither of you are answering my question. Are we talking about the suffering of individual pigs and minke whales? Or the survival of pigs and minkes as a species?
//ve - you aren't stupid so you know the difference//
I know the difference between hunting the minke to extinction on the one hand, and breeding pigs forever in order to give me my bacon and eggs, Ummmm.
I've got that[i bit. And if the [i]only] moral issue is the preservation of all extant living species then argument over.
But it's not the only moral issue, is it? Farming may secure the future of Porcus (or is it Sus) as a species or genus, but what of the life of the individual pig who is bred and slaughtered to give you your bacon sandwich?
I know the difference between hunting the minke to extinction on the one hand, and breeding pigs forever in order to give me my bacon and eggs, Ummmm.
I've got that[i bit. And if the [i]only] moral issue is the preservation of all extant living species then argument over.
But it's not the only moral issue, is it? Farming may secure the future of Porcus (or is it Sus) as a species or genus, but what of the life of the individual pig who is bred and slaughtered to give you your bacon sandwich?
(Got it wrong again, VE - must try harder)
I was trying to say (a criticism of the OP) that the Japanese
who kill minkes for food aren't worse than we who kill pigs and sheep for the same reason.
The processes involved in the slaughter may be distressing to the animal. They may also be distressing to the observer
VE in an earlier, far younger incarnation was a butcher's boy. Just got driving licence. Once a week up to the local abattoir to collect a couple of pig carcasses. It's a kind of fenced carousel. Pigs ushered in, travel round in a slow clinkety-clunk kind of way, then reach "collection" point when tilty device encloses and upturns pig. And wide mechanical knife moves across and slices through pig's neck. The next pig on the carousel may or may not have a sense of this imminent fate. Anyway it squeals. Those squeals and the smell of the blood spilt are not good.
I was trying to say (a criticism of the OP) that the Japanese
who kill minkes for food aren't worse than we who kill pigs and sheep for the same reason.
The processes involved in the slaughter may be distressing to the animal. They may also be distressing to the observer
VE in an earlier, far younger incarnation was a butcher's boy. Just got driving licence. Once a week up to the local abattoir to collect a couple of pig carcasses. It's a kind of fenced carousel. Pigs ushered in, travel round in a slow clinkety-clunk kind of way, then reach "collection" point when tilty device encloses and upturns pig. And wide mechanical knife moves across and slices through pig's neck. The next pig on the carousel may or may not have a sense of this imminent fate. Anyway it squeals. Those squeals and the smell of the blood spilt are not good.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.