No animals have been domesticated since the dawn of humanity. Humans on average had far more animals previously than we do today. Everybody then had horses donkeys mules camels elephants oxen llamas etc for transport and farming, often having dogs alongside, even birds of prey, while also maintaining livestock.
Although cats and dogs have peaked in their numbers today by comparison as population has increased, like many other types of pets. Yes a trend. The smartphone. Social media. Let them do what they want.
Yes hypocrisy, meat emissions, but then you have pets. So they want to get rid of the livestock or the pet? What do pets eat, and it ain't a plant based burger. Do they cancel pets too? Now they sell you the robots. These people are the dumbest alive.
But animals are also sentient. Almost every damn one of them. Yet I will still have no qualms on eating livestock for my diet. Or defending myself.
Animal worship. Not quite how that went then, representations of divinity. Often because of the hunt becoming a right of passage. Animals are fierce as the hunter gather in the stone age, sooner turning mighty beasts into gods. Identified by association, and omens, often into representations of the cosmos, becoming feared or worshipped. Perhaps the comet was the snake, or they were associated into constellations, and astrology. Upon domestication and association domesticated species like the dog, cat, bull, elephant, monkey, bird, fish etc became revered and turned into further gods.
It is also because of their sentience that they are worshipped. Today it has become a fetish and a trend some of the worship you had identified. Although science has proved animals have the capacity to feel, share connections; think, communicate, adapt, and learn. Almost all species domestic and wild. Except bugs, bug, feckless droids. It is primarily an understanding of them, and balance.
But there is also an insidious narrative corrupting. Where technology is pushing automation to replace our meat food sources. It is doing this for profit.
No animals have been domesticated since the dawn of humanity. Humans on average had far more animals previously than we do today. Everybody then had horses donkeys mules camels elephants oxen llamas etc for transport and farming, often having dogs alongside, even birds of prey, while also maintaining livestock.
Although cats and dogs have peaked in their numbers today by comparison as population has increased, like many other types of pets. Yes a trend. The smartphone. Social media. Let them do what they want.
Yes hypocrisy, meat emissions, but then you have pets. So they want to get rid of the livestock or the pet? What do pets eat, and it ain't a plant based burger. Do they cancel pets too? Now they sell you the robots. These people are the dumbest alive.
But animals are also sentient. Almost every damn one of them. Yet I will still have no qualms on eating livestock for my diet. Or defending myself.
Animal worship. Not quite how that went then, representations of divinity. Often because of the hunt becoming a right of passage. Animals are fierce as the hunter gather in the stone age, sooner turning mighty beasts into gods. Identified by association, and omens, often into representations of the cosmos, becoming feared or worshipped. Perhaps the comet was the snake, or they were associated into constellations, and astrology. Upon domestication and association domesticated species like the dog, cat, bull, elephant, monkey, bird, fish etc became revered and turned into further gods.
It is also because of their sentience that they are worshipped. Today it has become a fetish and a trend some of the worship you had identified. Although science has proved animals have the capacity to feel, share connections; think, communicate, adapt, and learn. Almost all species domestic and wild. Except bugs, bug, feckless droids. It is primarily an understanding of them, and balance.
But there is also an insidious narrative corrupting. Where technology is pushing automation to replace our meat food sources. It is doing this for profit.