Pet Corn Snake
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Sorry forgot to spell check!
Human beings are NOT herbivorous, we are omnivorous, meaning we require balance in our consumption of meat and vegetables in order to be healthy...unless you are using supplemental protein, which I think is for the birds, but is a different discussion, altogether...Pet Corn Snake said:when i sit here and thing, crushing an ant, slaying a cow pig or sliting a dofins throught, its all the same, its killing a life.. and i know we need food and thing s but i'am sure if people put more effert into growing vegitables ect.. then we would solve alot of problems with obsesity and would probably live longer as humans, but telling this to the world is harder then anyone can imagine because soo many people love meat, me myself, i think meat is really nice, but the way some of it is got is most disturbing..
snake5007 said:Most livestock that we feed on are specially bred for that purpose, those dolphins are wild and will never be bred or farmed to replace the ones that have been killed.
MegF. said:Not all hunting of wild animals is a bad thing. Deer hunting is big here in the south to cull the huge populations resulting in better wildlife management. Dying slowly from starvation is no better than dying slowly by inept methods of slaughter. That said, dolphins are not exactly at such huge populations that they are eating more than the environment can sustain. They aren't endangered by any means, but huge cullings such as done by the Japanese could conceivably destroy the local population.
MegF. said:We're back to a renewable source. Pigs, cows and chickens are raised for food. They are replaced with others. Once dolphins become extinct...that's it. Same for the whales. That's why there was an international moratorium placed on hunting them. Let me tell you, there's nothing cuter than a baby pig or cow...as far as intelligence though....I don't see the Navy training cows to point out mines....they can't even figure out how to walk into a chute. And for what it's worth...I buy cage free chicken eggs.
They may not mean the destruction of trees, but they, when herded, definitely represent the destruction of vast amounts of riperian habitat...which leads us back to "wildlife management" and all it does for all of us...MegF. said:Where we ran our cattle, there were no trees to begin with. It's in N. California and it's just flat lands all the way to San Francisco. No trees were taken out. Where we ran cattle before, the trees were left there. The cattle ran in the mountains and ate the existing grass with trees and all other natural brush and bushes left there. If you've ever been to Springville, CA that's where it was. Big mountains and lots of trees. Cattle don't necessarily mean destruction of trees. We ran them on 23,000 acres of trees!
MegF. said:Where we ran our cattle, there were no trees to begin with. It's in N. California and it's just flat lands all the way to San Francisco. No trees were taken out. Where we ran cattle before, the trees were left there. The cattle ran in the mountains and ate the existing grass with trees and all other natural brush and bushes left there. If you've ever been to Springville, CA that's where it was. Big mountains and lots of trees. Cattle don't necessarily mean destruction of trees. We ran them on 23,000 acres of trees!
Not when they are grazing streamside. If you don't believe me just take a walk along the Owen's River or through Horseshoe Meadows or Hot Creek, below the geothermal area, and take a look at all of the collapsing undercut banks with hoofprints in the mud. It happens throughout the high elevation meadows up here every year.MegF. said:Eat local cuz our cattle guys need the dough! As far as when we herd them we destroy the land, there's actually very little of that. Cattle tend to stay to the paths that were already there. They dislike wasting energy to cut across territory. They mostly travel in single file so the trails are fairly small and we bring them in with horses, not trucks so it really doesn't destroy large amounts of territory. Grass grows rapidly up north with the amount of rain they get, so you really don't have any real lasting impression. If the cattle leave, the grass grows back very quickly and cattle chew grass down to around an inch to inch and a half from the ground causing less damage than even horses or ( the worst) sheep which take it all the way to the roots or pull it out completely.
kev1144 said:You spend all these years watching that Green Mullet Grey Pantsuit wearing Captain Planet and just when the dolphins need him the most he's nowhere to be found. You would figure Gi would talk to her fellow countrymen and tell them this is wrong, or maybe even Ma-ti get in there and give them "heart", but nothing NOTHING MA-TI!!!! YOU HEAR ME. I was expecting them to come, but after I saw the dolphin being dragged behind the truck followed by guy with michette slashing dolphins throat like they were about to dishonor his sister I shut it off and hid in a dark corner never wanting to be a planeteer again.
Awful Awful stuff angry face