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Post by trollhunterx on Sept 10, 2010 2:36:34 GMT 1
Joe K - I don't think this helps any. Kiteman raised a valid point, you're just poking with a stick and hoping for a reaction. You're welcome to your opinion, but telling me what I'm supposedly doing isn't an opinion, and you're wrong. Try to remember that you're not the forum nanny.
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Post by havelock on Sept 10, 2010 10:17:12 GMT 1
Joe K - I don't think this helps any. Kiteman raised a valid point, you're just poking with a stick and hoping for a reaction. You're welcome to your opinion, but telling me what I'm supposedly doing isn't an opinion, and you're wrong. Try to remember that you're not the forum nanny. Fair enough, I'll keep stum from here on
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Post by rsmith7 on Sept 10, 2010 11:34:39 GMT 1
Are Humans Parasites?
How would you categorise Al Gore?
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Post by StuartG on Sept 10, 2010 12:48:52 GMT 1
The Daily Telegraph... Mandrake spotted the former vice-president last week at the restaurant Roussillon with 20 colleagues from Generation Investment Management, of which he is the chairman. His behaviour on this occasion was, happily, unimpeachable. In keeping with the environmentally sustainable lifestyle trumpeted by Gore, who made the global warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth, the restaurant in Belgravia says it provides "serious, sensitive and considered vegecentric food". www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/7856395/Al-Gore-the-crazed-sex-poodle-seeks-respite-in-London.html
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Post by marchesarosa on Sept 10, 2010 12:58:16 GMT 1
It seems a curious concept that animals are "parasytic" on their habitat as a whole?
Humans are predators in a trivial but true sense, as most animals are. Why would any other animal, if it could think, believe its own success was pathological? Do animals write books and cure diseases? Do animals do anything apart from respond to the biological imperative to keep themselves alive and procreate?
I think that in responding to these imperatives we have progressed rather a lot!
I'm very glad to be here and I would not wish anyone else out of the way either ( well, just a few).
But we could certainly do something NOW to control the RATE of expansion of our species because it is indeed infringing upon the habitats of the wild creatures.
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Post by StuartG on Sept 10, 2010 13:18:29 GMT 1
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Post by marchesarosa on Sept 10, 2010 15:31:17 GMT 1
I've seen that lecture, stu! Brilliant.
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