It does look more dragony than peacocky. St. George Street was named after this guy: http://www.thestar.com/news/2007/05/1…
It does look more dragony than peacocky. St. George Street was named after this guy: http://www.thestar.com/news/2007/05/1…
Fun Fact: St. George St. is not named after the dragon slayer. Just an 1800's French business owner.
As soon as I clicked this, I thought "they had better have Robarts." Apparently it was a prison in one of the Resident Evil movies. The Medical Sciences Building is an even more oppressive Brutalist prison at U of T though.
Reread my comment. I was talking about invertebrates. Nematodes, fruit flies, other insects, etc. have no welfare protection. There is debate about crustaceans, but I think in the US, currently there is no protection for them.
I agree, I've always wondered about "pescatarians" who don't eat meat because of animal mistreatment, but choose to ignore overcrowded and unhealthy fish farming practices.
Similarly, I end up killing millions of the organism that I work with, but in my case, I use nematodes. It brings up another question, do animals that react to aversive stimuli, and have nociceptors (pain receptors) in their nervous system need consideration too? Currently, no invertebrates outside of cephalopods…
There is a Star Wars VII script as he pulls out the artwork at 4:50. April Fools? except this is from an event in March...