| |
talk.politics.animals |
"Rat & Swan" <lab...@cybermesa.com> wrote in message > > My understanding is that some domesticated animals can be http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3383425.stm "Orang-utans 'may die out by 2025'..." ... ..... It's all good food :-)) Michael Saunby
news:btuiaf$kh2$1@reader2.nmix.net...
> > re-introduced into the wild, so my assumption would be the latter.
domesticated animals are not very common? When did you last see a wild
cow, or a wild sheep, or even a wild dog or cat? These species owe their
very existence to domestication. You complain about exploitation but then
seem quite content to discard entire species when you alone feel you no
longer have a use for them. Not very ethical.
> good idea, I think -- and work on recreating more diverse and
> natural ecologies where the re-released animals could live -- also a
> good idea.
and always have done. Perhaps non apes on the planet might be better of
with all non-vegetarian apes being removed. But is it your choice to make?
Best decide soon though before all the non human apes have gone, or there
will be none.
> I think we should consider that we could do much more in terms of
> re-creating more of a gathering culture than we have now.
may only purchase a proportion of their food, thuse ensuring that everyone
takes the trouble to learn how to forage, to cultivate, to store, to cook,
to fish, to hunt, etc.
> areas, as long as they were ecologically sensitive in the ways
> they did it.
as members of our species, and related species always have done.
> pinon nuts in the dry uplands of New Mexico which are not
> suitable for farming without massive irrigation. The ecology
> was degraded significantly by grazing "food" animals on it,
> but gathering native vegetable foods actually improves the ecology.