I once had a friend who owned a large female dog. I went over to his house for the first time. He had me sit on the couch while he went to the kitchen for beer. Meanwhile his dog came up to me, let me pet her. Then she lay on the carpet, rolled over facing me, and spread her hind legs wide open and watched me.
I am no longer friends with him.
I knew an artist who does custom work for pay; she sells art at sci fi/fantasy conventions. She mentioned how much furry-related work she is asked to do, the kind you might see on Rule 34 site. You do not want to go there, believe me. There seems to be a serious number of this kind of pervs in this world. When you add to that all the kid fuckers, I begin to wonder just how messed up a lot of people are.
I'll give that a 5 or 10% chance, but the problem is that the former friend was kind of weird and had no female friends, girlfriends etc. He was a hermit kind of techie type.
Belly rubs? How many people rub up their large dog's belly area?
an interesting aspect of Animorphs is that the series wasn't written by the author whose name is on the cover. and I don't think this is much of a conspiracy even, as it was at some point admitted by the alleged author that due to the overwhelming workload, the books had to be ghostwritten. which to me sends a clear message that Applegate may have had nothing to do with the writing of the series.
as for the gateway theory, I bet it wasn't put there for no reason. it was published by Scholastic, which from what I gather is the biggest publisher of school books in the US. if I were now to point to an entity that could've been involved in the writing and publishing of these books, I'd say the Church of Scientology. kinda funny, but not really - look into the history of science fiction as a literary genre. the running joke is that the scientology was founded by a sci-fi writer, which makes me wonder if we haven't got this backwards.
for more on how media has been messing with children's heads, see Fredric Wretham's "Seduction of the Innocent" about the postwar comic mania.
Furyism is the precursor to straight up beastiality. Think about it.
I get the hate for furries and bestiality but 80% of pet owners practicing bestiality sounds insane.
I once had a friend who owned a large female dog. I went over to his house for the first time. He had me sit on the couch while he went to the kitchen for beer. Meanwhile his dog came up to me, let me pet her. Then she lay on the carpet, rolled over facing me, and spread her hind legs wide open and watched me.
I am no longer friends with him.
I knew an artist who does custom work for pay; she sells art at sci fi/fantasy conventions. She mentioned how much furry-related work she is asked to do, the kind you might see on Rule 34 site. You do not want to go there, believe me. There seems to be a serious number of this kind of pervs in this world. When you add to that all the kid fuckers, I begin to wonder just how messed up a lot of people are.
I'll give that a 5 or 10% chance, but the problem is that the former friend was kind of weird and had no female friends, girlfriends etc. He was a hermit kind of techie type.
Belly rubs? How many people rub up their large dog's belly area?
Hey farmers/shepards need dogs man , I doubt there's anything sexual there
Must only be in the cities
an interesting aspect of Animorphs is that the series wasn't written by the author whose name is on the cover. and I don't think this is much of a conspiracy even, as it was at some point admitted by the alleged author that due to the overwhelming workload, the books had to be ghostwritten. which to me sends a clear message that Applegate may have had nothing to do with the writing of the series. as for the gateway theory, I bet it wasn't put there for no reason. it was published by Scholastic, which from what I gather is the biggest publisher of school books in the US. if I were now to point to an entity that could've been involved in the writing and publishing of these books, I'd say the Church of Scientology. kinda funny, but not really - look into the history of science fiction as a literary genre. the running joke is that the scientology was founded by a sci-fi writer, which makes me wonder if we haven't got this backwards. for more on how media has been messing with children's heads, see Fredric Wretham's "Seduction of the Innocent" about the postwar comic mania.