what's your favorite cat breed and why?
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WarDamnJay wrote: »_incogNEATo_ wrote: »
When I saw your name on this thread, I started to get a little worried about where this would go!
I thought you were gonna SEC shotgun style and say a tiger...
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LionessWhispers wrote: »Ligers and tigons usually suffer from gigantism or dwarfism, respectively. This causes their hearts and other organs to struggle and they generally live short lives. They're prone to things like cardiomegaly and painful bones and joints. I wish people would stop breeding them just for the sake of making lots of money off of the poor animals.
Poor animal? and how exactly does it ever live if people don't bread them?Yes... but a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts. It is a privilege to be among them.
I like cat breading
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All the ones that someone else owns.0
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Russian blue cats. Because they're social smart and you can walk them on a leash0
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47Jacqueline wrote: »Russian blue cats. Because they're social smart and you can walk them on a leash
I haz one...she's a sweetie. She's old and fat and doesn't clean herself the best though...
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People who believe false dichotomies are funny. I have cats and dogs and I love them both. No need to pick one or the other.
But cats are better.2 -
WarDamnJay wrote: »_incogNEATo_ wrote: »
When I saw your name on this thread, I started to get a little worried about where this would go!
I thought you were gonna SEC shotgun style and say a tiger...
Normally I would have but in case you haven't been watching our mascot has recently changed to a limping *kitten* cat!0 -
WarDamnJay wrote: »WarDamnJay wrote: »_incogNEATo_ wrote: »
When I saw your name on this thread, I started to get a little worried about where this would go!
I thought you were gonna SEC shotgun style and say a tiger...
Normally I would have but in case you haven't been watching our mascot has recently changed to a limping *kitten* cat!
Karma would suggest you guys will have a big game this weekend...0 -
Maine Coon.. cause I want a big cat. HoneyBadger out.0
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Lilly_the_Hillbilly wrote: »Maine Coon.. cause I want a big cat. HoneyBadger out.
I have one. She has been the best tempered cat I've had. She's going on 15 now0 -
LionessWhispers wrote: »Ligers and tigons usually suffer from gigantism or dwarfism, respectively. This causes their hearts and other organs to struggle and they generally live short lives. They're prone to things like cardiomegaly and painful bones and joints. I wish people would stop breeding them just for the sake of making lots of money off of the poor animals.
Poor animal? and how exactly does it ever live if people don't bread them?Yes... but a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts. It is a privilege to be among them.
They are not animals that would ever exist naturally in nature. Humans choose to breed them because they are a spectacle that people will pay money to see. I've worked with ligers and tigons that were cast aside because of their incredibly expensive medical bills. They all lived short lives but the people who dumped them in the first place didn't care because they were making thousands of dollars on the next ones already.
The animal's quality of life should matter. They shouldn't be breeding them.1 -
None.
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LionessWhispers wrote: »LionessWhispers wrote: »Ligers and tigons usually suffer from gigantism or dwarfism, respectively. This causes their hearts and other organs to struggle and they generally live short lives. They're prone to things like cardiomegaly and painful bones and joints. I wish people would stop breeding them just for the sake of making lots of money off of the poor animals.
Poor animal? and how exactly does it ever live if people don't bread them?Yes... but a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts. It is a privilege to be among them.
They are not animals that would ever exist naturally in nature. Humans choose to breed them because they are a spectacle that people will pay money to see. I've worked with ligers and tigons that were cast aside because of their incredibly expensive medical bills. They all lived short lives but the people who dumped them in the first place didn't care because they were making thousands of dollars on the next ones already.
The animal's quality of life should matter. They shouldn't be breeding them.
The vast majority of animals that are currently useful to humans wouldn't exist in their current forms without humans breeding them. House cats and dogs are the most obvious example of that.0 -
LionessWhispers wrote: »LionessWhispers wrote: »Ligers and tigons usually suffer from gigantism or dwarfism, respectively. This causes their hearts and other organs to struggle and they generally live short lives. They're prone to things like cardiomegaly and painful bones and joints. I wish people would stop breeding them just for the sake of making lots of money off of the poor animals.
Poor animal? and how exactly does it ever live if people don't bread them?Yes... but a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts. It is a privilege to be among them.
They are not animals that would ever exist naturally in nature. Humans choose to breed them because they are a spectacle that people will pay money to see. I've worked with ligers and tigons that were cast aside because of their incredibly expensive medical bills. They all lived short lives but the people who dumped them in the first place didn't care because they were making thousands of dollars on the next ones already.
The animal's quality of life should matter. They shouldn't be breeding them.
ha0 -
OneHundredToLose wrote: »The vast majority of animals that are currently useful to humans wouldn't exist in their current forms without humans breeding them. House cats and dogs are the most obvious example of that.
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LionessWhispers wrote: »Umm I'm sorry but how are ligers "useful to humans"?
Didn't say they were. I was just pointing out that your argument about them not existing without mankind's intervention isn't a sound one, since that's true for literally hundreds of other species.
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_incogNEATo_ wrote: »LionessWhispers wrote: »They are not animals that would ever exist naturally in nature.
ha
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OneHundredToLose wrote: »
Didn't say they were. I was just pointing out that your argument about them not existing without mankind's intervention isn't a sound one, since that's true for literally hundreds of other species.
What? Lol did you read what I responded to? That was my response to the question "how exactly does it ever live if people don't [breed] them?" I was stating that they don't. They don't exist if people don't breed them because they are not found in nature.0 -
LionessWhispers wrote: »OneHundredToLose wrote: »
Didn't say they were. I was just pointing out that your argument about them not existing without mankind's intervention isn't a sound one, since that's true for literally hundreds of other species.
What? Lol did you read what I responded to? That was my response to the question "how exactly does it ever live if people don't [breed] them?" I was stating that they don't. They don't exist if people don't breed them because they are not found in nature.
That doesn't change the fact that saying they only exist because people breed them is irrelevant. That's pretty much true of all domesticated animals as well as many animals that are forced to live in zoos.0
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