« Harry Potter & the Half-Mad Court | Main | The Republican Hero vs. the Feminist Activist (and the Feminist Is Right) »
July 15, 2005
Is There No Humane Limit?
Steve Breitenbach is a friend, but I cannot thank him for sending this. If you don't want to read in the Seattle Times this latest step down the bottom of the hill called the Sexual Revolution, or Culture of Death, or name it yourself, skip this item.
If you are curious, but don't want to look, here's a clue: "'The farm was talked about in Internet chat rooms as a destination for people looking to have sex with livestock,' he said."
I find the logic in the article revealing: a push to ban bestiality because it is cruel to animals? Well, fine, I mean, yes, ban it by all means; but isn't it just a little degrading and corrupting of human society, if we even remember anymore what it means to be human? Those ruled by appetite will see it turn into a god that consumes them whole.
Posted by James M. Kushiner at 03:47 PM | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c5ee953ef00d83485a9dd69e2
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Is There No Humane Limit?:
Comments
Since the man died as a result of pursuing his hobby, I don't see how this can stand as a case of "sex abuse of animals," at least not this particular animal, since the latter got the better of it. Of course, as your remarks imply, it the abuse of one's own humanity that ought most to concern us. The article was, mercifully, a little stingy with the details as to cause of death, but the fact that a law might be passed to ban this "practice" makes one wonder how widespread it is. I don't think I want the details on that either.
Posted by: William Luse | Jul 15, 2005 7:42:45 PM
Eeeewwww ... Lord have mercy on us all!
Posted by: Pat Gonzalez | Jul 16, 2005 8:52:23 PM
click here to visit the Touchstone website.
Posted by: Webmaster | Jul 22, 2005 3:25:47 PM








Recent Comments
Bloggers
Popular Threads
Archives
OLD ARCHIVES 2002-2004
From May 2002–December 2004, Mere Comments was published via Blogger.com. Every post is still available at the link above.
Member since 12/2004