Dave Smith wrote:
True, but from a practical point-of-view she erred
by not knuckling under to the shakedown.
Dave Smith wrote:
True, but from a practical point-of-view she erred
by not knuckling under to the shakedown.
Dave Smith wrote:
Or peanuts, which are pulled up by their roots
to die slowly of dehydration in the sun. Those poor,
poor peanuts.
Dave Smith wrote:
Too late. She back-tracked.
http://www.businessinsider.com/ina-g...sh-enzo-2011-3
In article ,
[email protected] (Steve Pope) wrote:
Do you have a cite for that, in particular one that shows that humane
hunting of animals is correlated with later senseless violence against
humans?
--
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
[email protected]
On 30/03/2011 7:32 PM, Steve Pope wrote:
Be aware that I think that is a crock. I worked in law enforcement and
that would put me in the law enforcement community, and I don't think it
is true. Several of the guys I worked with were avid hunters and fishermen.
Dave Smith wrote:
For me, this is even more evidence of a correlation.
Steve
"Dave Smith" wrote
It would be interesting to find out the real story, from both sides. She
may not even know she turned them down.
One also has to wonder what the 6 year old was thinking. He may think she
is a lady down the street and they can get together in 15 minutes. Given a
choice, he may prefer going out for ice cream and be just as happy. Either
way, it is not good publicity for anyone. .
On Mon, 28 Mar 2011 22:56:18 -0400, "Ed Pawlowski"
wrote:
Here is his parent's blog page about it
http://www.angelsforenzo.com/pleasestopthemadness.htm
--
Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
In article ,
Dave Smith wrote:
It's a false statement anyway. I believe the indicator is
deliberate, repeated cruelty to animals which can escalate to treating
humans that way. Man has killed beast since the beginning of time
without resorting to violence against his fellow man and vegans and
vegetarians have perpetrated violence, which would seem out of place
since they don't harm animals.
Regards,
Ranee @ Arabian Knits
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/
Dan Abel wrote:
http://www.peta.org/issues/companion...mal-abuse.aspx
I think it's up to the parent or other custodial adult to try to
identify whether the child's interest in animal violence is pathological
or harmless. It is not sufficient, in my view, to simply assume just
because they are interested in "hunting" and (part of) society accepts
hunting, that everything is still a-okay. There could be some pathology
behind it.
Note that many normal children develop no interest in hunting.
Steve
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