I have eaten horse, zebra, kangaroo, ostrich, emu, rattlesnake, elk, moose, deer, caribou, 2 kinds of bear, frog, alligator, squirrel, turtle, and even tried guinea pig once. I will eat anything I can throw on my smoker or grill (or find in a restaurant), no reservations. If they made it legal and there was a good healthy source I would throw a hank of human on there in a heartbeat.
I have eaten horse, zebra, kangaroo, ostrich, emu, rattlesnake, elk, moose, deer, caribou, 2 kinds of bear, frog, alligator, squirrel, turtle, and even tried guinea pig once. I will eat anything I can throw on my smoker or grill (or find in a restaurant), no reservations. If they made it legal and there was a good healthy source I would throw a hank of human on there in a heartbeat.
Look people there is just some **** that is a certain way and that's just the way it is.
You don't eat people.
You don't **** your relatives.
You don't eat horses.
You want to do that **** you freaks? Go move somewhere else.
Why can't we eat humans? I'd do that too.
I was minding my own damn business.Look people there is just some **** that is a certain way and that's just the way it is.
You don't eat people.
You don't **** your relatives.
You don't eat horses.
You want to do that **** you freaks? Go move somewhere else.
Why can't we eat humans? I'd do that too.
I've never had a strong bond with a horse, but I've gotten attached to dogs before, so I can kinda understand why some people feel so strongly about this.
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I lived in downtown SLC about 18 years ago. One time when I was walking to trax(?) to catch a train, I walked by a house that had 3 animals on a spit, roasting them over a fire. Couldn't tell what they were at first, but on further inspection, they were dogs that had been skinned out. Looked like greyhounds or something. I also lived with a Vietnamese family in SLC for a about a year, and they used to joke with me all the time about cooking my dog. In theory, I would have no problem with someone who ate a dog who was killed by a car or something, but I would hate for it to be legal for people to go down to the shelter to get dinner for the night, and I believe that's the line of thinking with the horse law. Horse lovers don't want to open the door where horses are being killed for food, or where supplying horse meat becomes a business. For anyone who has ever had a strong bond with any animal, this shouldn't be that hard to understand. Some animals are much more intelligent and feel emotions closer to being human than a lot of people realize.
Prion disease, bro, Prion disease. Riddles your brain with holes.
I won't let my cows eat dogfood. Although dogfood is mostly grain, it has bovine brains in it, and might cause mad cow disease.
Never eat your own kind, bro. You'll be eating prions that will be propagated inside your vital organs.
I'd rather have a dog meat processers around who could render out the nutritional value of dogs than have homeless folks not eating. Poisoning dogs or putting them to sleep mercifully is no better than a butcher, but for those animals who were actually cared for, I think little pet cemeteries with stone monuments and grass lawns are wonderful ways to remember a loved family member. I know a lot of people who count their pet dog as more of kid than their human offspring, who typically do this whole teenage rip on their parents and then go off smugly ignoring every value their parents ever stood for. Give those kids another twenty years and they'll be thinking it all over again, but in the meantime, empty nesters need someone to restore their sense of bonding to others. Dogs are pretty good stand-ins for kids in those circumstances.
horses actually have more of a bond with humans than dogs, but at least if you can terminate an aged animal before it just turns into skin and bones or freezes in a blizzard, you will have averted some suffering.
Humans that contracted CJD most likely got it from cannibalizing the brains of other humans specifically-- not sure if you can contract it just by eating human muscle tissue.