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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=tomtucker]even the nicest person has a shitty side.........[B].no animal will backstab you, talk shit, have ulterior motives................they are who they are, they are pure and[/B] you can trust them.............animals [B]are[/B] better then humans[/QUOTE]
Yeah you're right about the bolded... but how about rats/other rodents, or bears, snakes, wasps, mosquitos, termites, etc? No, it's not their fault for acting upon their instincts, but as human beings it is to our advantage to not have termites destroying the foundations of our homes, mosquitos spreading disease, and snakes biting people etc.
[QUOTE=IamRAMBO24]Society has a materailsitic mindset, so they can only view human interactions as physical. But social interaction is mental: we value things that make us feel good. From a psychological perspective, there are sh*ttier people than animals and even things. Some people place animals and things over human lives and it's all psychological.[/QUOTE]
OK, but what about the intelligence of a human being, and our higher level of consciousness? Simply the fact that you were able to write what you wrote, and the fact that we experience a level of consciousness where we can have this discussion makes us superior to animals.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=9erempiree]Let me guess.
[/QUOTE]
he's been engaged to a blood elf for the past 7 years.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=DeuceWallaces]Ha, according to Dresta:
1) Overpopulation is not a problem.
2) Have as many kids as you can afford.
3) We need even higher birth rates so we can support and care for the biggest birth wave of the past 60 years.
That makes a lot of sense.[/QUOTE]
This is a very narrow view of humanity and incredibly inhumane. What are you going to do about the increased population? Start killing babies, take away people's rights and limit the amount of children or outright find creative ways to wipe out the population?
So generic.
[B]Here is another solution: humans are creative creatures[/B]; when we are faced with a problem, guess what, find a f*ckin solution; this is the reason why we are still dominating this planet and every other species have died out and are going to die out except domesticated animals which we have made our little b*tches.
As we populate, we will naturally take up all our resources until there are not anymore left, but guess what, we have a planet called "Mars" that we can inhabit with a ton of natural resources we can use to keep on living. [COLOR="Blue"][B][I]And the great thing about this is once we conquer mars, we can move to the next planet, and then the next, and so on and so forth.[/I][/B][/COLOR]
[I][B]This is call moving forward.[/B] [/I] Wiping out the population is backwards thinking.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=oarabbus]
OK, but what about the intelligence of a human being, and our higher level of consciousness? Simply the fact that you were able to write what you wrote, and the fact that we experience a level of consciousness where we can have this discussion makes us superior to animals.[/QUOTE]
Our rational intellect has nothing on our emotions. This is a huge misconception of our materialistic mindset.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=IamRAMBO24]This is a very narrow view of humanity and incredibly inhumane. What are you going to do about the increased population? Start killing babies, take away people's rights and limit the amount of children or outright find creative ways to wipe out the population?
So generic.
[B]Here is another solution: humans are creative creatures[/B]; when we are faced with a problem, guess we, find a f*ckin solution; this is the reason why we are still dominating this planet and every other species have died out and are going to die out except domesticated animals which we have made our little b*tches.
As we populate, we will naturally take up all our resources until there are not anymore left, but guess what, we have a planet called "Mars" that we can inhabit with a ton of natural resources we can use to keep on living. [COLOR="Blue"][B][I]And the great thing about this is once we conquer mars, we can move to the next planet, and then the next, and so on and so forth.[/I][/B][/COLOR]
[I][B]This is call moving forward.[/B] [/I] Wiping out the population is backwards thinking; colonizing planets is [B][I]forward thinking.[/I][/B][/QUOTE]
Why don't we just [B]travel back in time[/B] to warn our past selves, or maybe create an [B][I]alternate universe[/I][/B] or dimension to send the surplus population? [COLOR="DarkOrange"][B]How about floating cities?[/B][/COLOR]
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=DeuceWallaces]Why don't we just [B]travel back in time[/B] to warn our past selves, or maybe create an [B][I]alternate universe[/I][/B] or dimension to send the surplus population? [COLOR="DarkOrange"][B]How about floating cities?[/B][/COLOR][/QUOTE]
Stop trying to derail an obvious legit solution. There are already talks of Mars colonization as we speak, so to compare it to [I]"floating cities and time travel"[/I] is complete utter bullsh*t. The soil on Mars can be useful for construction and industrial materials, compounds with high chemical energy can be manufactured, solar power can be used for energy, they can even use certain processes to make food, etc.
It is extremely practical and can solve the population problem. By the time the earth blows over (about 100 years right?), we will have the technological advances for affordable space flight and affordable space stations to make this plausible (it'll be quicker if the situation calls for it). [B][I]That is the beauty of humans having such a gifted human mind.[/I][/B] We solve problems, not give up and wipe out half of the population out of fear.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=moe94]I was going to make this thread. lol
To people with pets, would you let a perfect stranger die if it meant your pet could live?[/QUOTE]
Yes. Is that even a serious ****ing question?
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
why do people value animal life over plant life?????
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=moe94]
To people with pets, would you let a perfect stranger die if it meant your pet could live?[/QUOTE]
yep, without hesitation or guilt
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=MMM]why do people value animal life over plant life?????[/QUOTE]
Because plants do not have feelings, do not feel pain, and aren't conscious, as far as we know.
On the other hand, humans have more complex emotions and are more conscious than animals ergo a human life should be valued over an animal life - at least that is one interpretation.
Hence the topic.
[QUOTE=Lamar Doom]yep, without hesitation or guilt[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=russwest0]Yes. Is that even a serious ****ing question?[/QUOTE]
And what if it was not a stranger? What if it was...
a) a pregnant mother
b) a pediatric oncologist
c) your friend/cousin/uncle/aunt
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=oarabbus]Yeah you're right about the bolded... but how about rats/other rodents, or bears, snakes, wasps, mosquitos, termites, etc? No, it's not their fault for acting upon their instincts, but as human beings it is to our advantage to not have termites destroying the foundations of our homes, mosquitos spreading disease, and snakes biting people etc.
OK, but what about the intelligence of a human being, and our higher level of consciousness? Simply the fact that you were able to write what you wrote, and the fact that we experience a level of consciousness where we can have this discussion makes us superior to animals.[/QUOTE]
of course mosquitos and rats have to be squashed, they spread disease.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
You don't get it? You ever been in a family of abusive drunks, drug addicts, and all together selfish *****? I take it you haven't. People value animals more than humans because an animal never screws you over, puts conditions on your love, or back stabs you after years of friendship. If you don't get it then you haven't lived or experienced enough of our human race.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=oarabbus]:confusedshrug: I just don't get it.
Don't get me wrong, I'm against animal cruelty, it's disgusting and abhorrent. But you know the train problem? Something like, 5 people are about to be hit by a train, you can flip the switch and divert the train, but it will then kill a single individual?
If there was a human being trapped on one side, and 10 animals on the other... sorry Fido, but I'm saving the human being. Again, I am NOT condoning any kind of violence or mistreatment of animals, but does anyone else out there consider a human life to be more valuable than that of an animal? PETA types will absolutely roast you for being an animal hater and despicable person for saying this, but don't explain their logic.[/QUOTE]
There are different values:
One is universally agreed value: "All human lives are equal" or "Humans are more valuable than animals".
Second is subjective value: "My family/pet/money is more important than a stranger" or "A rapist is worth less than dirt".
For example, my family is worth more than all the strangers in the world. I would let everyone else die before my family. This is despite knowing that all human lives are equal.
Not hard to understand at all.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
Some animals are more important to the benefit life preservation than humans. Like Einstein said, if all the bees die on the Earth, humans would only have four years to live.
But if all the bees do die, this will cause a dominos effect since bees pollinate plants, which helps them reproduce. If this does not occur, they will die out and become extinct. Animals that eat plants, in generalize guess, will die out too. We are talking about a mass extinction based upon one animal species.
I think humans don't really have an significant positive contribute to the ecosystems of the world if we all die out. But correct me if I'm wrong. I always wondered about that.
I just figure if you look at that type ideology that humans don't contribute to the world's ecosystem in a positive attribute, then we are not the most important animals to preserve this planet we're in. Thus, we are insignificant. We could be consider as leaches or a virus without predators to check and balance us.
And with that, I think it is logically to hold some animals above human lives to extent for the preserve life as we know it. This will cause us to live longer as well on this planet as well as other animals. And like that, we're not the most important animals on the planet to keep life going.
Plants>Humans on Earth. Plant powah 4 life.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=oarabbus]Because plants do not have feelings, do not feel pain, and aren't conscious, as far as we know.
On the other hand, humans have more complex emotions and are more conscious than animals ergo a human life should be valued over an animal life - at least that is one interpretation.
Hence the topic.
[/QUOTE]
I can see that. But without plants, you'll have more mass extinction. Humans are unique due to their conscious and incredible intellect, but I don't think they are more important than plants that keeps us and a lot of other humans to survive. Complex emotions and the ability to self aware doesn't matter with preserving life and the facet of survival. Plant life are more important than us at keeping life around, at least as we know it.
So, in that way plants should be more valued than humans. Plants could cause multiple mass extinction if they die out. Humans would not...at least I don't think. Even though humans aren't as important to the Earth, we would strive upon keeping ourselves alive.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
In most of these cases where someone says he would rather choose a few strangers to suffer or die for the well being of an animal, they are talking about their pet.
How can someone say that? Just imagine on one side you have 100 stangers and on the other you have one person you love the most. Now you have to choose who lives, whats your choice?
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=moe94]To people with pets, would you let a perfect stranger die if it meant your pet could live?[/QUOTE]
yes
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=Clyde]yup, my dog is part of my family.[/QUOTE]
this, to answer the OPs question, i think animals are obviously more important when you're connected, if it was some random ass animal then nah.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
never own a pet but i think in most cases i would choose a stranger over a pet. Losing a pet would be difficult but the stranger could have a family to support, etc. If the stranger was a child or female i think the odds are in the favour of the stranger over the pet.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=MMM]never own a pet but i think in most cases i would choose a stranger over a pet. Losing a pet would be difficult but the stranger could have a family to support, etc. If the stranger was a child or female i think the odds are in the favour of the stranger over the pet.[/QUOTE]
well then you are putting the question into context. Then can just as well assume that the person is the biggest douche or an asshole.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=MMM]never own a pet but i think in most cases i would choose a stranger over a pet. Losing a pet would be difficult but the stranger could have a family to support, etc. If the stranger was a child or female i think the odds are in the favour of the stranger over the pet.[/QUOTE]
I can understand that. Thats why I posted that other scenario in my previous post. How many strangers would you "sacrifice" for the life of your loved ones?
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=bingo123]I can understand that. Thats why I posted that other scenario in my previous post. How many strangers would you "sacrifice" for the life of your loved ones?[/QUOTE]
"Sacrifice" is the key word.
If sacrifice means to kill or murder, most people wouldn't sacrifice any stranger.
If sacrifice means strangers just died on their own, most people would agree.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=iamgine]"Sacrifice" is the key word.
If sacrifice means to kill or murder, most people wouldn't sacrifice any stranger.
[B]If sacrifice means strangers just died on their own, most people would agree[/B].[/QUOTE]
My bad on wording it.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=RedBlackAttack]Overpopulation can occur from a myriad of sources, including but not limited to "having more children." A decline in mortality rates can also lead to overpopulation, as it absolutely has in our case.
I don't see why that would lead you to dismiss the potential problems we may have down the road and our refusal to enter this problem into the national and/or international conversation.
Humankind is growing by about 74 million people every year, per the UN. We're expected to be over the 10 billion mark by 2100. Are you asserting that there is no problem, here? That the planet will be able to house us indefinitely, regardless of how fast the population grows?[/QUOTE]
You really need to understand that humankind is incapable of significantly outgrowing its capability to sustain itself. It simply cannot do so. If the number of people on the planet cannot be provided for, then the population will recalibrate itself to a stable equilibrium as it has always done, and as it did for thousands of years before our advances in production, technology and medicine brought on perpetual growth.
I don't see how you can be so certain what the future will bring when we have dealt with every population increase thus far (despite perpetual naysayers) and population growth is already on a downward curve from its initial explosion, and future technological developments cannot be guessed at. If it is climate change you are harking on about, then who is to say that nuclear fusion will not be perfected over the coming century? This would solve all our problems relating to energy and environmental damage.
But then i guess we could just keep 'arrogantly overpopulating' :lol. As if people's desire to have children has anything to do with arrogance, vanity maybe, but arrogance pfff.... rubbish.
[QUOTE=DeuceWallaces]Ha, according to Dresta:
1) Overpopulation is not a problem.
2) Have as many kids as you can afford.
3) We need even higher birth rates so we can support and care for the biggest birth wave of the past 60 years.
That makes a lot of sense.[/QUOTE]
Precisely. I'm glad your comprehension isn't faulty.
[QUOTE=oarabbus]Yes I did feel the need to include that disclaimer because I've had this discussion crash and burn before it even started, as people would try to attack my animal hating, apparently sociopathic ways rather than discuss the issue at hand.
For what it's worth, I don't have a problem with anyone eating meat; I also do not believe animal lives to be as valuable as human lives. Which I have clearly stated.
[/QUOTE]
Yeah, i guess i underestimated the extreme animal love on this site, combined with a contempt towards human beings that is reminisce of a one-party totalitarian state. Some guys in here would probably implement a one child policy if they had the chance, despite the US being a considerably underpopulated land mass, with a ton of room to grow.
[QUOTE=iamgine]"Sacrifice" is the key word.
If sacrifice means to kill or murder, most people wouldn't sacrifice any stranger.
[B]If sacrifice means strangers just died on their own,[/B] most people would agree.[/QUOTE]
Except those two instances are really the same: in both cases, the stranger would die as a result of the decision of the person who chooses their pet. In both cases, the decision maker is directly responsible, and though some may still be able to justify killing in order to save their pets in this instance, if they had to be involved with the process by having to notify the family and see those repercussions then they may choose differently. Basically, there is a huge difference between the abstract and reality in this hypothetical.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
**** people and **** animals. problem solved.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=bdreason]Because Animals are innocent, while Humans are guilty.[/QUOTE]
What is innocent about the animal kingdom?
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
I would murder any of you to save my cat. Or just for fun. Whatever.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=Dresta]
Except those two instances are really the same: in both cases, the stranger would die as a result of the decision of the person who chooses their pet. In both cases, the decision maker is directly responsible, and though some may still be able to justify killing in order to save their pets in this instance, if they had to be involved with the process by having to notify the family and see those repercussions then they may choose differently. Basically, there is a huge difference between the abstract and reality in this hypothetical.[/QUOTE]
Result is the similar but those two things are not really the same at all. It's like if I know terrorist is going to bomb WTC but doesn't tell anyone. Versus if I kill many people myself. Those two aren't the same at all.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=iamgine]Result is the similar but those two things are not really the same at all. It's like if I know terrorist is going to bomb WTC but doesn't tell anyone. Versus if I kill many people myself. Those two aren't the same at all.[/QUOTE]
Not doing something when something could easily be done is equal in responsibility, though not necessarily in malice.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=Dresta]Not doing something when something could easily be done is equal in responsibility, though not necessarily in malice.[/QUOTE]
Not sure I agree.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
F*ck the stranger. I'm saving the animals so I can eat them later
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=iamgine]Not sure I agree.[/QUOTE]
So if a nuke is planted in New York City, and a person unrelated to the bomb has a button in front of them that will disarm the bomb, and they know this is what it does and what will happen if they don't do anything, that if this person let the bomb go off they do not carry the same responsibility for the consequences of what has happened as the planter of the bomb?
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=Dresta]So if a nuke is planted in New York City, and a person unrelated to the bomb has a button in front of them that will disarm the bomb, and they know this is what it does and what will happen if they don't do anything, that if this person let the bomb go off they do not carry the same responsibility for the consequences of what has happened as the planter of the bomb?[/QUOTE]
Now change that there is a dog instead of a human placed next the bomb disarmer. He would push it.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
**** humans, especially the light skinned ones
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=Dresta]So if a nuke is planted in New York City, and a person unrelated to the bomb has a button in front of them that will disarm the bomb, and they know this is what it does and what will happen if they don't do anything, that if this person let the bomb go off they do not carry the same responsibility for the consequences of what has happened as the planter of the bomb?[/QUOTE]
I'm saying not helping is not equal to murdering people yourself.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=IamRAMBO24]Stop trying to derail an obvious legit solution. There are already talks of Mars colonization as we speak, so to compare it to [I]"floating cities and time travel"[/I] is complete utter bullsh*t. The soil on Mars can be useful for construction and industrial materials, compounds with high chemical energy can be manufactured, solar power can be used for energy, they can even use certain processes to make food, etc.
It is extremely practical and can solve the population problem. By the time the earth blows over (about 100 years right?), we will have the technological advances for affordable space flight and affordable space stations to make this plausible (it'll be quicker if the situation calls for it). [B][I]That is the beauty of humans having such a gifted human mind.[/I][/B] We solve problems, not give up and wipe out half of the population out of fear.[/QUOTE]
The first crazy shit Rambo says that I agree with :applause:
It's much easier said than done and our bodies are not built to survive in space or other planets, but space colonization is the only option in the endgame for humanity. At some point humanity will become extinct, but if we want to delay that, we have to look to space.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=miller-time]Because humans are able to understand what is happening to them while animals aren't. It kind of makes their situation seem even more tragic. They seem so much more helpless because they have no idea what to do or why it is happening. Probably not the only reason but it is part of it I think.[/QUOTE]
Animals arent helpless. How did their species survive so long? It is condescending to view animals as helpless victims just because their brains don't work the same as ours. Your animalist words disgust me. You are no better then white supremicists.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=oarabbus]:confusedshrug: I just don't get it.
Don't get me wrong, I'm against animal cruelty, it's disgusting and abhorrent. But you know the train problem? Something like, 5 people are about to be hit by a train, you can flip the switch and divert the train, but it will then kill a single individual?
If there was a human being trapped on one side, and 10 animals on the other... sorry Fido, but I'm saving the human being. Again, I am NOT condoning any kind of violence or mistreatment of animals, but does anyone else out there consider a human life to be more valuable than that of an animal? PETA types will absolutely roast you for being an animal hater and despicable person for saying this, but don't explain their logic.[/QUOTE]
PETA are bunch of hypocrites, they're for killing Pit Bulls just because they're Pit Bulls...fvck them.:rant
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
Because empathy is a narcissistic behavior, OP.
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Re: Why do some people value animals over human lives?
[QUOTE=Nick Young]Animals arent helpless. How did their species survive so long? It is condescending to view animals as helpless victims just because their brains don't work the same as ours. Your animalist words disgust me. You are no better then white supremicists.[/QUOTE]
:banghead: How dare those animals not move to another free flowing river when their indigenous home gets dammed by humans. It's not our fault fish can't walk.