I’m not talking about the consumption of animals here, to be clear. What I’m talking about is spending days and a bunch of money planning to kill something, doing the killing, and skinning/eviscerating what was killed, and often displaying the stuffed corpse. Hunters and fishers refuse to admit they’re obsessed with taking pleasure in killing something.

Miss me with the “tradition” stuff, it’s just peer pressure from the dead and a fallacious argument. Don’t tell me it’s to eat, like I said, I’m not talking about the consumption here, so please prove to me you are literate by not bringing up that point. And don’t tell me you’re respectful to the animals you kill; I don’t believe the planning, stalking, and killing is a good way to show respect.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    This is a manmade problem though. We exterminated all or most of the predators that would usually do the duty of population control in our stead, because said predators didn’t differentiate between livestock and wild animals.

    • @Dasus
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      122 months ago

      What of it?

      Would you happen to have a time machine so we can go back and change history so humans never replace said apex predators, or does the fact that “we did it” mean that we don’t need to keep hunting and we can just let species overpopulate and destroy the ecology completely, even for themselves and other species of plants and animals?

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      22 months ago

      Man-made or not, it exists now. You can’t just go “this problem was made by people, so I’m not gonna do anything about it!”.

    • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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      11 month ago

      Where I live, literally the place where they killed the last wolf in the state, is landmark, and the guy who did it has a town named after him.