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China "Dog Meat" Festival Begins
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<blockquote data-quote="vantexan" data-source="post: 2916839" data-attributes="member: 24302"><p>The Iroquois were meat eaters. You can't get away from the fact in nature many animals survive by eating other animals. Which is more terrifying to a cow, surrounded by a pack of wolves that descend upon it, ripping it to shreds, or a device placed to it's forehead, sending a bullet quickly into it's brain, killing it immediately. Once it's gone, it's gone. Better than a buffalo fleeing for it's life from horse mounted hunters shooting arrows into it. Or before they had horses driving a herd over a cliff. The fact is if we didn't eat them we'd have to slaughter them all anyways. Leaving large herds unchecked would turn grasslands to desert, would produce much more methane than now, tie up roadways, etc. I think next time I spring for a ribeye I'll have a good laugh thinking about this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="vantexan, post: 2916839, member: 24302"] The Iroquois were meat eaters. You can't get away from the fact in nature many animals survive by eating other animals. Which is more terrifying to a cow, surrounded by a pack of wolves that descend upon it, ripping it to shreds, or a device placed to it's forehead, sending a bullet quickly into it's brain, killing it immediately. Once it's gone, it's gone. Better than a buffalo fleeing for it's life from horse mounted hunters shooting arrows into it. Or before they had horses driving a herd over a cliff. The fact is if we didn't eat them we'd have to slaughter them all anyways. Leaving large herds unchecked would turn grasslands to desert, would produce much more methane than now, tie up roadways, etc. I think next time I spring for a ribeye I'll have a good laugh thinking about this. [/QUOTE]
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