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Antoniosola
Joined: Nov 7, 2010
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Nov 7, 2010
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Hello everyone, first of all, I would like to say yours that I don't agree with animal abuse, but I
agree with the sport festival of fox hunting, and Bullfighting, because are traditions and people
like, and there are a lot of people who are working in this business. In my opinion we should
respect all opinions, but what will happen whith people who are working in this activities? I say
it, because in Spain there are many people who live of bullfighting and is a job.
Apart from this, there are people who hunt animals for pleasure in all countries, and people don't
say anything.
Thank you.
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GMR Transcription
Joined: Sep 14, 2010
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Oct 10, 2013
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This kind of animal cruelty should be immediately stopped. Since this kind of traditions are only
spreading violence in the name of culture ethnicity. Due to this kind of tradition many animal are
being killed enormously every year. Organization like PETA & all should come forward & look
to stop these bloody games in near future.
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Linh
Joined: Nov 4, 2013
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Province/State: Krung Thep City: Bangkok
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Nov 4, 2013
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Every day we often watch TV or read the newspapers have reported detecting, arresting an illegal
animal trade. The animals are usually wild animals, rare derived from domestic or overseas shipping.
It may be tigers, some primates, pangolins, turtles or animal products such as rhino horn, deer
antler or bile ..
cong bo chat luong
san pham, khac dau
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Farhad
Joined: Jun 13, 2008
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Nov 7, 2013
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AminaYasmine wrote:
Bullfighting, fox-hunting and whale-hunting are
part of some countries' traditions. Do you think that countries (or individuals) should have a
right to continue these traditions?
This post was edited on: 2009-03-16 at 01:48 AM by: AminaYasmine
NO. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------- Farhad
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Quân Lê
Joined: May 9, 2014
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
May 9, 2014
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I always wonder, the bull in bullfighting, are they caught in the wild or are they risen to serve
the fight ?
if they are caught, we have no right to kill them.If they are risen to serve our purpose, I think we
can....
ve sinh an toan
thuc pham |công bố thực
phẩm |công bố mỹ
phẩm --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------- _______________________
from fosi with love
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Farhad
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Jul 29, 2014
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Antoniosola wrote:
Hello everyone, first of all, I would like to say
yours that I don't agree with animal abuse, but I agree with the sport festival of fox hunting, and
Bullfighting, because are traditions and people like, and there are a lot of people who are working
in this business. In my opinion we should respect all opinions, but what will happen whith people
who are working in this activities? I say it, because in Spain there are many people who live of
bullfighting and is a job.
Apart from this, there are people who hunt animals for pleasure in all countries, and people don't
say anything.
Thank you.
My friend,
Some of our acts are not considered sustainable and are not compatible with sustainability and
sustainable development any longer. We are advised to consume less of all things that disturb the
environment and the planet not only physically but also emotionally. Whatever resembling violence
and harming life of any creature for fun could be emotionally and physically violating steps
towards sustainable development. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------- Farhad
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Tiffany
Joined: Oct 28, 2014
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Oct 28, 2014
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Lately the attitude towards beavers have changed. They were also killed off and repelled because of
so called 'water environment destruction". But it turns out people need to change their ways -
finally!
Reversing Course on Beavers
By JIM ROBBINSOCT. 27, 2014
BUTTE, Mont. — Once routinely trapped and shot as varmints, their dams obliterated by dynamite and
bulldozers, beavers are getting new respect these days. Across the West, they are being welcomed
into the landscape as a defense against the withering effects of a warmer and drier climate.
Beaver dams, it turns out, have beneficial effects that can’t easily be replicated in other ways.
They raise the water table alongside a stream, aiding the growth of trees and plants that stabilize
the banks and prevent erosion. They improve fish and wildlife habitat and promote new, rich soil.
And perhaps most important in the West, beaver dams do what all dams do: hold back water that would
otherwise drain away.
“People realize that if we don’t have a way to store water that’s not so expensive, we’re going to
be up a creek, a dry creek,” said Jeff Burrell, a scientist with the Wildlife Conservation Society
in Bozeman, Mont. “We’ve lost a lot with beavers not on the landscape.”
For thousands of years, beavers, which numbered in the tens of millions in North America, were an
integral part of the hydrological system. “The valleys were filled with dams, as many as one every
hundred yards,” Mr. Burrell said. “They were pretty much continuous wetlands.”
Full article and resources:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/28/science/reversing-course-on-beavers.html?ref=earth
http://www.scienceclarified.com/El-Ex/Environmental-Ethics.html
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/oct/23/beavers-devon-wild-england-friends-of-earth
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Farhad
Joined: Jun 13, 2008
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Re: Cultural Traditions vs. Animal Cruelty
Nov 28, 2014
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This is good news about our new behavior. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------- Farhad
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