There are words for people who enjoy killing, but I would be modded for mentioning them. Eating bushmeat is just as problematic as farming nonhuman animals for food: some of the problems are just different.
There are words for people who enjoy killing, but I would be modded for mentioning them. Eating bushmeat is just as problematic as farming nonhuman animals for food: some of the problems are just different.
Blasting away with a high-powered rifle does not make you a man.
Humans killing all the wolves?
Assuming the event occurred, that's evidence the elephant ate the frock. Did they find any bones?
Said no vegan I know, ever. We're talking about different animals, with different digestive systems, with different access to food. You're overgeneralising.
Also, campaign against fossil fuels and against habitat destruction.
I think the word you're looking for is "lubricious", especially if we're discussing slug sex.
It would be interesting to learn whether these are the same rednecks who are into eating bushmeat (i.e. hunting) in the US.
It's been done (well, with other corvids). It's an interesting experience, but it all depends on how close you want to get, and rescued corvids don't end up with just anyone. I'd think twice, and I have a fair idea what I'm doing.
This would seem to be consistent with research into reciprocal behaviour in ravens (Corvus corax), a closely related species.
... Donald Trump ...
I wasn't having a go or anything
I agree. This is also likely to get me into rant mode. Even the remaining forest isn't "natural", because it's all been logged at some point. The megafauna and the species dependent on it are gone, and there is massive resistance to reintroducing even beavers, never mind wolves.
The rock type and means by which the structures formed are very similar - cooling lava in contact with water.
Loudoun Hill is more interesting for its history.
I was thinking vocabulary like "metaharzburgite", "metadunite", "metagabbro" and "wehrlite".
Scotland is nothing short of awesome for geologists - or just anyone in some way vaguely interested in rocks. Hutton's Section, one of the most important sites in the history of geology, is no more than a thirty minute walk from the railway station in Edinburgh.
Let's just say that Swift's idea isn't quite what I had in mind.
I'm not in North America, no. You should be able to narrow down which country where bears were extirpated some time ago from the username.
Well, if you hadn't offshored your industrial and many of your service industries, you might not have such high rates of unemployment and low rates of pay (the result of demand for jobs massively exceeding the supply of said jobs). We have the same problem here, with zero-hour contracts and other forms of exploitation…