cockbeard wrote:Anyone who makes any choice based on the anthropomorphosis of animals is a fucking idiot, let alone a choice is big as diet
No.cockbeard wrote:... by spending nothing you become an irrelevance to them....
Men aren't a potential buyer. They do care what women who only use towels think of their product.cockbeard wrote:Did you think Tampax care what men think of their products?
Apologies if I've misread your post, but it read to me like yo felt all vegetarians outside of those who just don't like the taste and texture of meat are guilty of this. Humour me; which human traits, specifically ones that animals are incapable of, do some people project onto animals?cockbeard wrote:You can care about the welfare of an animal without applying anthropomorphosis to it. What I mean by that word is projecting distinctly human traits and characteristics to an animal. If others misuse the word to try and state that animals cannot feel so it's ok to cage them, then they are fools, apologists or both
cockbeard wrote:But Quorn can still fuck off though. It's the spam, the turkey twizzler, the herta hotdog of the vegetarian world. It encourages people not to cook, not to think about what they are cooking, and not to shop properly imo and all that
Andy wrote:Humour me; which human traits, specifically ones that animals are incapable of, do some people project onto animals?
Mal0wner wrote:Real veggies use TVP.
People anthropomorphising certain animals because of their familiarity with them is what prompts that poster to be created, at least the line to be placed where it is. Cannibalism is bad because of the risk of disease transmission, I imagine that's why pigs were forbidden in some abrahamic religions, because pork smells and feels so much like human flesh, however our perceived relationship with a species doesn't make them humanYossarian wrote:There's nothing anthropomorphic about that poster.
Yossarian wrote:I mean, how is cooking Quorn somehow worse for encouraging people 'not to cook' than meat? It's not a ready meal, it still needs to be turned into a dish with other ingredients. Arguably, Quorn involves more work than, say, mushrooms. It's an ingredient, it's no different to cook than any other ingredient.
Poppycock.cockbeard wrote:People anthropomorphising certain animals because of their familiarity with them is what prompts that poster to be created, at least the line to be placed where it is.
Dynamite.cockbeard wrote:Cannibalism is bad because of the risk of disease transmission, I imagine that's why pigs were forbidden in some abrahamic religions, because pork smells and feels so much like human flesh...
Andy wrote:Cuteness isn't anthropomorphising. You might have a point if you want to have a go at meat eaters
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!