Aller au contenu

Photo

In Memory of Cecil the Lion.


  • Veuillez vous connecter pour répondre
274 réponses à ce sujet

#201
Clover Rider

Clover Rider
  • Members
  • 9 429 messages

Especially because if you do go around being vocal about both you might get labeled a......<gasp>.......SJW.

I have always been fine with being called a Super Jew Woman for good causes.


  • daveliam aime ceci

#202
daveliam

daveliam
  • Members
  • 8 436 messages

I have always been fine with being called a Super Jew Woman for good causes.

 

I'm, personally, a Slick Jazzy Walker, myself.



#203
Clover Rider

Clover Rider
  • Members
  • 9 429 messages

That works too.

 

It means whatever you want it to mean because it has no meaning anymore.

 

Tho I always read the J as Jew.



#204
TheOgre

TheOgre
  • Members
  • 2 251 messages

I didn't say it wasn't a concern. I said there's better stuff for people to have a fit over, like all the terrible things that happen to Humans on a daily basis.

but apparently the people only like throwing a fit about Human lives when we can make a political statement along with it.


I can be angry at multiple things at the same time. I don't need others telling me what I should be angry more with anyway.
  • daveliam aime ceci

#205
TheOgre

TheOgre
  • Members
  • 2 251 messages

Trolling or just being edgy.

Animal cruelty is not funny or cool. And most of all it's not right.

And yeah I never get people that look at their pets like that.

Every cat I have every owned has been a friend to me.


Eh I just had the impression Rakia was fishing for negative attention

#206
Simfam

Simfam
  • Members
  • 4 500 messages

I disagree, cats have many personalities from being jerks to being super sweethearts. They also play with you, talk with you and sleep with you and they can even be there for emotional support.

 

You form bonds with them like they can form bonds with other cats or dogs or whatever.

 

Friendship is not exclusive to just one species.

 

Grew up with animals.

 

Had one since I was three.

 

All my animals are members of the family.

 

And yes.

 

Cats are very independent animals.

 

All my cats are stray.

 

And each of them are different from each other.



#207
Fidite Nemini

Fidite Nemini
  • Members
  • 5 734 messages

Grew up with animals.

 

Had one since I was three.

 

All my animals are members of the family.

 

And yes.

 

Cats are very independent animals.

 

All my cats are stray.

 

And each of them are different from each other.

 

Eh, according my parents, our first dog helped me learn to walk: I would grab her fur, she'd stand up and drag me along and inevitably, I started trotting along. Such a shame Asti died before I grew old enough to hold memories of her.

Our second dog, Joyce, on the other hand trained my shoebinding skills. Because if you weren't fast enough doing that when you were about to take her for a walk, you'd get an eyeful of hyperactive tail. Sadly she too died as we had to put her to sleep last year due to cancer.

 

Our cat (Merlin) though, that sucker got on his mind to simply ignore death or whatever. Fifteen years old and still the first thing atop a pile of freshly dried clothes. I'm pretty sure he thinks that only time spent awake counts towards life expectancy or something along that line, damn lazy butt.


  • Han Shot First et Katiefrost aiment ceci

#208
Simfam

Simfam
  • Members
  • 4 500 messages

Hahaha yeah, cats are wild cards.

 

You can get the sweetest, most loving thing in the world.

 

But next to it is the lousiest, grumpiest, most vile being on the planet xD



#209
Fishy

Fishy
  • Members
  • 5 819 messages

Eh, according my parents, our first dog helped me learn to walk: I would grab her fur, she'd stand up and drag me along and inevitably, I started trotting along. Such a shame Asti died before I grew old enough to hold memories of her.

Our second dog, Joyce, on the other hand trained my shoebinding skills. Because if you weren't fast enough doing that when you were about to take her for a walk, you'd get an eyeful of hyperactive tail. Sadly she too died as we had to put her to sleep last year due to cancer.

 

Our cat though, that sucker got on his mind to simply ignore death or whatever. Fifteen years old and still the first thing atop a pile of freshly dried clothes. I'm pretty sure he thinks that only time spent awake counts towards life expectancy or something along that line, damn lazy butt.

 

I remember when I was a kid. I wanted to run away with my dog because I hated school.. Too much Huckleberry Fins(dat influence bruh). I actually did ''run away'' .. Like one miles away lol. Than I started to think..  Hmmm.. For how much time I can survive with 75 cents ? Than I went back and my parents were happy that I took the dog for a walk lol.



#210
LightningPoodle

LightningPoodle
  • Members
  • 20 468 messages
Someone should string him up and take a photo of the corpse.

#211
NeonFlux117

NeonFlux117
  • Members
  • 3 627 messages
Hunting humans is much more enjoyable anyways.
  • LightningPoodle aime ceci

#212
LightningPoodle

LightningPoodle
  • Members
  • 20 468 messages

Hunting humans is much more enjoyable anyways.


Send him out into the wilderness with nothing but the clothes on his back and a bottle of water and see how far he gets with an angry mob of arbalists chasing him down! ******* will know regret then.

#213
Simfam

Simfam
  • Members
  • 4 500 messages

Bear Grylls would survive.



#214
Cyonan

Cyonan
  • Members
  • 19 356 messages

Someone should string him up and take a photo of the corpse.

 

Let's show how much better we are than people who slaughter animals by slaughtering them and displaying their corpse like a trophy!

 

Seems legit.

 

Bear Grylls would survive.

 

By drinking his own ******?

 

Seriously BSN? You're going to censor that word?


  • LightningPoodle aime ceci

#215
NeonFlux117

NeonFlux117
  • Members
  • 3 627 messages
BSN is lamezoid censorship.

#216
LightningPoodle

LightningPoodle
  • Members
  • 20 468 messages

Let's show how much better we are than people who slaughter animals by slaughtering them and displaying their corpse like a trophy!
 
Seems legit.


I believe the punishment should fit the crime. He wants to hunt animals for sport? Let someone hunt him for sport.

#217
CrazyRah

CrazyRah
  • Members
  • 13 280 messages

Eh, according my parents, our first dog helped me learn to walk: I would grab her fur, she'd stand up and drag me along and inevitably, I started trotting along. Such a shame Asti died before I grew old enough to hold memories of her.

Our second dog, Joyce, on the other hand trained my shoebinding skills. Because if you weren't fast enough doing that when you were about to take her for a walk, you'd get an eyeful of hyperactive tail. Sadly she too died as we had to put her to sleep last year due to cancer.

 

Our cat (Merlin) though, that sucker got on his mind to simply ignore death or whatever. Fifteen years old and still the first thing atop a pile of freshly dried clothes. I'm pretty sure he thinks that only time spent awake counts towards life expectancy or something along that line, damn lazy butt.

 

Actually almost the same with me. The dog helped me learn to walk as I used it as support instead of holding someones hand. 


  • Han Shot First et Fidite Nemini aiment ceci

#218
NeonFlux117

NeonFlux117
  • Members
  • 3 627 messages
I would hunt him just for the lulz. My kind normally hunts the human vermin for food and necessity, but for this meatbag we'd make an exception.

#219
Drone223

Drone223
  • Members
  • 6 659 messages

As an ecologist I can tell you that if you remove even one animal from the food web there's going to huge ecological cascade effect. Your not just affecting one organism your affecting a lot of them and that includes us.


  • Han Shot First aime ceci

#220
LightningPoodle

LightningPoodle
  • Members
  • 20 468 messages
Are you a cannibal?

#221
von uber

von uber
  • Members
  • 5 519 messages

I think it should be perfectly ok to go hunt a lion or any other wild animal.

 

However.

 

You have to do it dressed in nothing but a loin cloth, be armed with a 6 inch knife and be on your own.


  • Big Magnet, KaiserShep, LightningPoodle et 1 autre aiment ceci

#222
KaiserShep

KaiserShep
  • Members
  • 23 812 messages

I think it should be perfectly ok to go hunt a lion or any other wild animal.

 

However.

 

You have to do it dressed in nothing but a loin cloth, be armed with a 6 inch knife and be on your own.

 

dcdf5b42acb95fa3551faa23a2f1e9e4.jpg

 

If you can do that on your own, you deserve to take the spoils of your victory, and be crowned king of the jungle. 



#223
CrazyRah

CrazyRah
  • Members
  • 13 280 messages

I think it should be perfectly ok to go hunt a lion or any other wild animal.

 

However.

 

You have to do it dressed in nothing but a loin cloth, be armed with a 6 inch knife and be on your own.

 

If the kill is made under these requirements. I will have no complaints and a lot of awe



#224
Commander Rpg

Commander Rpg
  • Members
  • 1 536 messages

I believe the punishment should fit the crime. He wants to hunt animals for sport? Let someone hunt him for sport.

Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth, like the ancient civilizations. Congrats.



#225
TheOgre

TheOgre
  • Members
  • 2 251 messages

dcdf5b42acb95fa3551faa23a2f1e9e4.jpg

 

If you can do that on your own, you deserve to take the spoils of your victory, and be crowned king of the jungle. 

 

 

If the kill is made under these requirements. I will have no complaints and a lot of awe

 

 

I think it should be perfectly ok to go hunt a lion or any other wild animal.

 

However.

 

You have to do it dressed in nothing but a loin cloth, be armed with a 6 inch knife and be on your own.

 

 From the safety of a deerstand chumps have been hunting for trophy (when they don't hunt for meat or use the body). I agree with this, make them fight the beast one on one and truly prove their 'manliness' or whatever!