Lonewulf
Humanistic Cyborg
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2005
- Messages
- 10,375
I'm guessing that you only read the first half of my post. Either that or I'm too dense to get your Interweb humour tonight.
Or both.
It wasn't humor, it was an attack on TBK's logic. Afterwards, I realized that I was going down a path that I really didn't go down, so I edited my reply. I'd rather not spend all of my time attacking other posters on this forum, I really don't want to expend my energy on something like that. It's really not what I want to be/do.
ETA: D'oh! Posted before your 2nd reply appeared. Please ignore.
I figured I should explain my post anyways, since you already posted my unedited reply.
No problem, otherwise.
I'd like to make a comment:
Aggle-rithm said:Therein lies the problem: it's just not realistic to believe that you can save the whole world. The resources are limited, and we as humans have to make hard decisions about which animals live and which die. If we don't make a decision, it will be made for us, and animals will suffer as a result. The problem of limited resources also exists outside the confines of shelters and rescue groups. It's simply not an option to let them all run wild and free on a farm somewhere -- that magical farm doesn't exist.
I agree with this, more or less, but that doesn't change the ideal.
The ideal of society is to have one without criminals making lives harder on the rest of us; thus we work towards that ideal, without ever really expecting to reach the end of it.
The ideal of animals is to treat them as humanely as possible, and not have to euthanize or kill any animal needlessly. The dog that you mentioned in your post, however, was necessarily put down as you didn't have the resources to spend on him. But, ideally, it would have been preferable to keep him alive. That ideal hasn't changed, just your ability to fulfill that ideal has.
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