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LEFT WING LOONS Title: Animal Activists Attack Two Bro’s For Fishing – All Hell Breaks Loose Clash Daily Animal rights activists harass a couple of guys fishing and it gets ugly. A couple of guys were out fishing on a bridge on a beautiful, sunny day. Its an age-old thing that people do hunting, fishing, out in nature, and bringing home food. But now in 2018, we have activists that want to stop that because theyre enlightened. They know better. And they believe that animal life is the same as human life. Watch: Fish feel pain just like a human except for a human in the womb, right? I wonder how these activists would have reacted if one of those fishing bros had said, Fish can feel pain just like humans do? So can a fetus. These animal rights activists are notoriously anti-human life. But I digress
So, lets assume that these animal rights activists are vegans. Then, this BBC article is going to make them squirm. Professor Jack Schultz of the University of Missouri at Columbia says that plants are just very slow animals. [Now that enrollment is down at Mizzou, who knows where Professor Emeritus Jack Schultz will end up.] Professor Schultz has been studying plants and insects for over 40 years and teaches Plant Sciences at Mizzou.
he is making a point about common perceptions of our leafy cousins, which he feels are too often dismissed as part of the furniture. Plants fight for territory, seek out food, evade predators and trap prey. They are as alive as any animal, and like animals they exhibit behaviour. Oh, dear. And in some ways, theyre more advanced than we are. They dont have a brain and nervous system, but plants are exceptional in other ways.
despite lacking eyes, plants such as Arabidopsis possess at least 11 types of photoreceptor, compared to our measly four. This means that, in a way, their vision is more complex than ours. Plants have different priorities, and their sensory systems reflect this. As Chamovitz points out in his book: light for a plant is much more than a signal; light is food. So while plants face many of the same challenges as animals, their sensory requirements are equally shaped by the things that distinguish them. The rootedness of plants the fact that they are unmoving means they actually have to be much more aware of their environment than you or I do, says Chamovitz. Well, plants are obviously more advanced than some animal rights protesters, thats for sure. Im sure Ive eaten a salad that was more intelligent than these protesters. Consuelo De Moraes of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, along with collaborators, has shown that as well as being able to hear approaching insects, some plants can either smell them, or else smell volatile signals released by neighbouring plants in response to them. More ominously, back in 2006 she demonstrated how a parasitic plant known as the dodder vine sniffs out a potential host. The dodder vine then wriggles through the air, before coiling itself around the luckless host and extracting its nutrients. Conceptually, there is nothing much distinguishing these plants from us. They smell or hear something and then act accordingly, just as we do. Source: BBC A parasitic plant that callously feeds on other unsuspecting plants? Maybe these idiots can stage a protest. But the big question if plants are just like us
What exactly are these numbskulls going to eat? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.
#1. To: Deckard (#0)
Well, that was a wasted 7 minutes - where was the ending with the cops cuffing the leftist assholes?
No shit. I was waiting for the fishermen to clock those loons.
I thought in the closing moments they'd roll that dipshit over the railing to visit the fish.
Better yet, sleep with the fishes.
There are no replies to Comment # 6. End Trace Mode for Comment # 6.
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