Skip to main content

First a disclaimer.  If you are squeamish or hate to read/hear about deviant behavior of the nature of bestiality then please don't read the linked to article.  It's gross to imagine how far some humans will stoop or debase themselves to.

You hear so many stereotypes about people from the South, especially Mississippi and Alabama.  When I read about this horrible warped piece of news I was relieved to see it was from Pennsylvania.  It's horrible that this happened at all much less in the United States but I guess anymore it's not shocking to hear about just about anything anymore.

Be as the Bereans ( Acts 17:11 )

Last edited by gbrk
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

This isn't confined to the South or even the US. This disgusting practice goes on all over the world. The good news for them...Bernie and the dems will still let them vote. No action is despicable to dems.  This is the party that says you can now kill your new born baby, and they certainly aren't going to give an abused animal a thought.

Last edited by Jutu

I don't really care what consenting adults do, but involving innocent children and even critters is beyond understanding. At least there might be some well deserved payback:

 

“Wild Animals don’t practice safe sex, of course they have STIs!” explains Dr Barbara Natterson-Horowitz, a modern day Dr Dolittle and UCLA cardiologist consulting for the Los Angeles zoo. Atlantic bottlenose dolphins can get genital warts, baboons suffer from herpes and syphilis is common in rabbits. (3)

STIs in animals and humans have a historical relationship. “Animals suffer from almost all of the diseases that human beings do but veterinarians and physicians never talk about this. Physicians have not traditionally seen veterinarians as their clinical peers and that is unfortunate”. (3) Indeed, studying STIs in both humans and animal could save lives for both. “Two or three of the major STIs [in humans may even] have come from animals” says Alonso Aguire, a vet and president for conservation medicine at wildlife trust” (4).

 “We know, for example, that gonorrhoea came from cattle to humans. Syphilis also came to humans from cattle or sheep many centuries ago, possibly sexually”. The most recent and deadliest STI to have crossed the barrier separating humans and animals has been HIV, which humans got from the simian version of the virus in chimpanzees.

The most common STI among animals today is Brucellosis or undulant fever present in domestic livestock, dogs, cats, deer and rats. It is also transferable to humans by drinking contaminated milk or direct contact with the infected animals and can be very dangerous to humans, one reason why milk is pasteurised.

Overall, Humans STIs have enough in common with animal STIs that much can be learnt about human STIs by studying them in animal models. (4)

http://www.animalresearch.info...nsmitted-infections/

 

Stanky posted:

I don't really care what consenting adults do, but involving innocent children and even critters is beyond understanding. At least there might be some well deserved payback:

 

“Wild Animals don’t practice safe sex, of course they have STIs!” explains Dr Barbara Natterson-Horowitz, a modern day Dr Dolittle and UCLA cardiologist consulting for the Los Angeles zoo. Atlantic bottlenose dolphins can get genital warts, baboons suffer from herpes and syphilis is common in rabbits. (3)

STIs in animals and humans have a historical relationship. “Animals suffer from almost all of the diseases that human beings do but veterinarians and physicians never talk about this. Physicians have not traditionally seen veterinarians as their clinical peers and that is unfortunate”. (3) Indeed, studying STIs in both humans and animal could save lives for both. “Two or three of the major STIs [in humans may even] have come from animals” says Alonso Aguire, a vet and president for conservation medicine at wildlife trust” (4).

 “We know, for example, that gonorrhoea came from cattle to humans. Syphilis also came to humans from cattle or sheep many centuries ago, possibly sexually”. The most recent and deadliest STI to have crossed the barrier separating humans and animals has been HIV, which humans got from the simian version of the virus in chimpanzees.

The most common STI among animals today is Brucellosis or undulant fever present in domestic livestock, dogs, cats, deer and rats. It is also transferable to humans by drinking contaminated milk or direct contact with the infected animals and can be very dangerous to humans, one reason why milk is pasteurised.

Overall, Humans STIs have enough in common with animal STIs that much can be learnt about human STIs by studying them in animal models. (4)

http://www.animalresearch.info...nsmitted-infections/

 

I realize I put this topic in the "News" category and not to deliberately cross forums (i.e. Religion/News) but the following scripture verse came to mind and I do realize that the specific context of the scripture was not for beastility.

Romans 1:26-27 CEV
God let them follow their own evil desires. Women no longer wanted to have sex in a natural way, and they did things with each other that were not natural. [27] Men behaved in the same way. They stopped wanting to have sex with women and had strong desires for sex with other men. They did shameful things with each other, and what has happened to them is punishment for their foolish deeds.

 

Add Reply

Post

Untitled Document
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×