neil cooney 10,416 Posted April 12, 2017 Report Share Posted April 12, 2017 I do enjoy eating meat and hunting if I can get the chance. The line stops at animals that are normally kept as pets, as they are considered by me to be 'honourary humans' if you understand what I mean. For that reason I wouldn't eat animals like cat, dog, horse, hamster or monkey. The animal rights extremists tend to think of all animals as 'honourary humans'.Every culture is different though Hindus for example probably think we are heathens for eating cow ...meat is meat whatever way you look at it .just treat the animal with the respect it deserves for feeding you that's all . Trouble is, most people haven't got a clue how their every day meat has been treated, you just hope for the best really or do you really care if it's not pet-like? Or maybe you are very choosy about your source of meat? Obviously in this case with dogs, under that culture, it seems some have gone out of their way to cause suffering, which is totally fcuking wrong. I had a cracking Horse steak a couple of weeks ago in a restaurant, it was a great piece of fillet, best Horse I've eaten........to some that may seem distasteful, but did it have a worse life or treated with less respect than some cheap supermarket chicken or beef? The fact is, most people haven't a fcuking clue how the meat on their plate was treated on the way to their table.... Game being the main exception. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
neil cooney 10,416 Posted April 12, 2017 Report Share Posted April 12, 2017 My sister was a secondary school teacher in South Korea and her students told her that growing up mam or dad often came home with puppies that would be like pets to them until they went missing. She said that the restaurants that served up dog smelt like the kennels at home and to make matters worse in Korea it's customary for your host to choose your menu for you so she ate dog meat a few times. She said it's alright but the smell coming from the kitchen wasn't nice. Personally, I'd be rude and decline. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Silversnake 1,099 Posted April 13, 2017 Report Share Posted April 13, 2017 I seem to remember being told in la linea when the bullfighting was on that fought bull steaks were more tender,i don't know the varacity of that,myth maybe?i do know that pinoys beat dogs,they will tell you otherwise,but I have seen dog skins on rubbish tips,the bleeding red mess flesh-side showed they hadn't died of old age. I don't know about that, I wouldn't want to eat a fighting bull because of the meat taint from it still having it's bollocks let alone the adrenaline. I have noticed that deer shot after being bumped or the ones that need shooting again taste... it's difficult to describe, a little bitter perhaps? I can't tell the difference at all myself and I've eaten a few that probably had a good bit of adrenaline in them. was just thinking that? Do deer caught by dogs taste worse than shot deer? Pre ban of courseI have never noticed a difference with venison personally and I have eaten males and females, young and old and some have been a bit stressed, not intentionally of course. I have known south east asians who like adrenaline through dogs and goats, I have heard of it termed as 'sweating' the animal. Pretty crook in my opinion... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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