Thief
Rogue Theologian
Man has a sacred duty to care for and protect all God's creation.
Every species has its place and purpose...
We dominate all that we touch.
We kill what will not obey.
I got more if you need it.
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Man has a sacred duty to care for and protect all God's creation.
Every species has its place and purpose...
even if they are gods creatures. but how do we know they really are gods creatures?
poisoning ones like rattle snakes, or violent ones like puma's. I mean it's either us or them, and many of them go after us for no reason other than to attack.
Erm. How animals behave and even the weather conditions are affected by human's disconnection from each other and from god.we even eat more than we need because of that disconnection. In the original idea of creation no thing poses a threat to another, all things exist in harmony and love. We also call that heaven. Human have great responsibility in earthly existence since it is created by human choice.
I thank the op for thought provoking question.
Poisonous snakes help control the rodent population. For all of human history, rodents have competed with humans for food (raiding grain storage, etc).
Rodents also carried the fleas which caused the bubonic plague. In fact, part of what caused the bubonic plague to spread so widely was the superstitious belief that cats (another controller of rodent populations) were evil servants of witches. People killed the cats. The rats became more numerous. The rats were able to infest human homes. The people got bitten by the rats' fleas. About 50% of the population of Europe died from the plague.
People tried to kill the "devil's" creatures. They ended up killing a large part of the population. So when people suggest that certain animals should be made extinct, I consider those people to be a far greater threat than the animals.
That was my first reaction... Well after I thought 'extinct'If you want to eliminate dangerous animals, go after humans. We're the greatest danger to ourselves the earth has.
what good is your book smarts if you don't have street smarts? but anyway, that's the last of my off topic review with you.Are calls for education a waste of time? And what would that say of the one that considered them so?
that's no wrath. I won't release my wrath on the net again, I don't need the local cops knocking on my door, again.What did i ever do to deserve such ruthless wrath?!
I was referring to the OP, not the title.
I can be concerned with a number of things at the same time, though grammar is rarely on my list of things to be really concerned about.
rattlesnakes for one, and that's my biggest one. also, bears and maybe sharks. I never heard of a shark eating an entire person, they usually take a bite and run...or swim, that doesn't sound like hunger so much to me.Which animals hunt humans for no other reason that to attack?
I wonder why god made some animals so aggressive, and yet others are not. you mention weather, but aggressive or mellow animals are like this year round it seems like, indoors and outdoors. thanks for the reply.Erm. How animals behave and even the weather conditions are affected by human's disconnection from each other and from god.we even eat more than we need because of that disconnection. In the original idea of creation no thing poses a threat to another, all things exist in harmony and love. We also call that heaven. Human have great responsibility in earthly existence since it is created by human choice.
I thank the op for thought provoking question.
I agree with what humans have done, but have you ever weighed out the good and bad that humans have done? I mean humans invented the computer and the internet, and how happy does that make you? or millions of others?It's humans that are the aberrant life form.
All the other plants and animals live in symbiosis and contribute to the general welfare of the ecosystem. Humans, on the other hand, are ecologically toxic. We're a planetary infection and are destroying the whole ecosystem.
If any species should be "made extinct" it should be us.
what good is your book smarts if you don't have street smarts? but anyway, that's the last of my off topic review with you.
The 'good' you cite is self serving. You're equating human worth with our success at exploiting the planet and finding clever ways of amusing ourselves.I agree with what humans have done, but have you ever weighed out the good and bad that humans have done? I mean humans invented the computer and the internet, and how happy does that make you? or millions of others?
like animals, I think some humans should be made instinct for reasons you listed and then some...but not all. it's a simple division of good and bad, if all the bad people were gone how much better would the world be in?
The 'good' you cite is self serving. You're equating human worth with our success at exploiting the planet and finding clever ways of amusing ourselves.
This isn't my idea of good.
I should put this next line in my signature.
if you don't explain yourself, then your point has no merit.
that last line I just typed is in reference to you saying 'This isn't my idea of good'.
life is too short and can be cut out from us very easily at any given moment in my opinion. so anything that can make life better without hurting anything or anyone is good to me. who wants to be around a bunch of angry, depressed people with no values waiting to die? maybe some people do who like drama (not saying that about you), but it seems to me in this day way too many people are taking themselves way too seriously for what they are worth. good to be serious at times, but no need to be miserable because all that does is make people dysfunctional after time.
I still say that if we're going to make any animal extinct, make it humans.
5. Rabbits:
Now, here is another problem that was faced when mankind tried to make a species 'extinct' once *see cane toads.
We have always had (and still have) a huge rabbit problem, competing with native marsupials and farming livestock for food and contributing to soil erosion in many areas.
We are just overrun with them, courtesy of the British, who introduced the species via sailing ships back in the 1800's as 'hunting sport for their dogs'.
So, back in the 1950's, it was decided to wipe out all the rabbits in Australia, by using 'biological warfare' and a virus was created called 'myxomatosis'. This virus did unspeakable, cruel things to rabbits and eventually mutated into strains resistant to any anti-virals they were using at the time:
Myxomatosis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eventually, the virus crossed species and started to infect/affect our native wildlife, like those the rabbits were in competition with, while the rabbits started to breed an immunity towards the disease. It was a total disaster.