Robin, any pronouns, 20 Used to have opinions on discourses here, but realized that it can basically be summed up as "DNI if you bullied ace people in 2016"
If you had to design a bovine for an environment they don't exist in naturally, like the arctic circle, what would you like them to look like and where would you place em?
fun fact! yakutian cattle already live in the arctic circle!!! theyre completely covered with fur--even their udders are furry--to keep them nice and and toasty in the sakha republic, siberia!
the sakha republic is in red on this map! the arctic circle goes through the top of it :3
however... if i was designing them... id make them fluffier. more fur. More
in order to preserve my internet privacy iβll have to start feeding everyone misinformation about myself. i donβt eat. i donβt sleep. i donβt breathe. i donβt blink. i donβt have βbloodβ
you'd like to imagine the outcome of the bitter legal warfare might have knock-on effects that allow people more freedom in self-expression on their own lawns in general, but mainly it seems to be exclusively about the 12 foot tall home depot skeletons. and what a world.
im just so happy i live in a time period where actual meaningful biological transition is possible. even if we lose rights or the ability to exist in public, nothing can turn back the clock on that, and just by having any sort of access to that our lives are made immensely better. millions of our sisters throughout history would never have dreamed of a day where they could have what HRT does for us.
please don't lose the plot of this. if you're a trans person on HRT you're a living miracle, the dream of hundreds of millions of your ancestors. your lives are all deeply meaningful no matter what anyone says.
A prayer by Kalonymus b. Kalonymus ben Meir that appears in his poem Χ‘Χ€Χ¨ ΧΧΧ ΧΧΧΧ, ΧΧ Sefer Even BoαΈ₯an (Β§13), describing the author's wish t
Cursed be the one who announced to my father:
βItβs a boy!"...
...How could he twist the course of the stars so much?
How could he have erred so in his astrology?
A lying tongue, a foolβs mouth it had given him
For he foolishly transformed justice to poison
He altered the law and transposed the lines
Oh, but had the artisan who made me created me instead β a worthy woman...
...I would say "how lucky am I"
Father in heaven
who did miracles for our ancestors with fire and water...
...Who would then transform me from a man to woman?
Were I only to have merited this being so graced by goodness...
What shall I say?
why cry or be bitter?
If my father in heaven has decreed upon me
and has maimed me with an immutable deformity
then I do not wish to remove it.
the sorrow of the impossible is a human pain that nothing will cure
and for which no comfort can be found.
So, I will bear and suffer until I die and wither in the ground.
Since I have learned from our tradition
that we bless both, the good and the bitter
I will bless in a voice hushed and weak:
blessed are you [HaShem] who has not made me a woman.
The dev's are on record saying they used the school as reference for understanding what an American school looks like. This isnβt a theory, it's fact
imo the term "walkable" in "walkable cities" should be understood to mean "wheelchair accessible" as well, not just literally "possible to walk in". the act of walking in a city doesn't automatically make it walkable
Phew. This one took, uhβ¦ a bit longer than expected due to other projects both irl and art-wise, but itβs finally here. The long-awaited domestic animal infographic! Unfortunately, I didnβt have enough space to cover every single domestic animal (Iβm so sorry, reindeer and koi, my beloveds) but I tried to include as many of the βmajor onesβ as possible.
I made this chart in response to a lot of the misunderstandings I hear concerning domestic animals, so I hope itβs helpful!
Further information I didnβt have any room to add or expand on:
π βBreedβ and βspeciesβ are not synonyms! Breeds are specific to domesticated animals. A Bengal Tiger is a species of tiger. A Siamese is a breed of domestic cat.
π Different colors are also not what makes a breed. A breed is determined by having genetics that are unique to that breed. So a βbluenose pitbullβ is not a different breed from a βrednose pitbullβ, but an American Pitbull Terrier is a different breed from an American Bully! Animals that have been domesticated for longer tend to have more seperate breeds as these differing genetics have had time to develop.
π It takes hundreds of generations for an animal to become domesticated. While the βdomesticated fox experimentβ had interesting results, there were not enough generations involved for the foxes to become truly domesticated and their differences from wild foxes were more due to epigenetics (heritable traits that do not change the DNA sequence but rather activate or deactivate parts of it; owed to the specific circumstances of its parentsβ behavior and environment.)
π Wild animals that are raised in human care are not domesticated, but they can be considered βtamed.β This means that they still have all their wild instincts, but are less inclined to attack or be frightened of humans. A wild animal that lives in the wild but near human settlements and is less afraid of humans is considered βhabituated.β Tamed and habituated animals are not any less dangerous than wild animals, and should still be treated with the same respect. Foxes, otters, raccoons, servals, caracals, bush babies, opossums, owls, monkeys, alligators, and other wild animals can be tamed or habituated, but they have not undergone hundreds of generations of domestication, so they are not domesticated animals.
π Also, as seen above, these animals have all been domesticated for a reason, be it food, transport, pest control, or otherwise, at a time when less practical options existed. There is no benefit to domesticating other species in the modern day, so if youβve got a hankering for keeping a wild animal as a pet, instead try to find the domestic equivalent of that wild animal! There are several dog breeds that look and behave like wolves or foxes, pigeons and chickens can make great pet birds and have hundreds of colorful fancy breeds, rats can be just as intelligent and social as a small monkey (and less expensive and dangerous to boot,) and ferrets are pretty darn close to minks and otters! Thereβs no need to keep a wolf in a house when our ancestors have already spent 20,000+ years to make them house-compatible.
π This was stated in the infographic, but I feel like I must again reiterate that domestic animals do not belong in the wild, and often become invasive when feral. Their genetics have been specifically altered in such a way that they depend on humans for optimal health. We are their habitat. This is why you only really see feral pigeons in cities, and feral cats around settlements. They are specifically adapted to live with humans, so they stay even when unwanted. However, this does not mean they should live in a way that doesnβt put their health and comfort as a top priority! If we are their world, it is our duty to make it as good as possible. Please research any pet you get before bringing them home!
I am once again stating that the last part of the infograph was NOT an βadopt donβt shopβ message and I assumed I clearly said βdo not support unethical breeders,β as in breeders who breed more for aesthetics than health.
I did not mean for it to sound like I was calling all breeders unethical. Itβs saying that if you truly want a breed with unethical traits, then it is better to adopt it than to encourage more breeding of that trait (though you could also buy from a breeder who is specifically avoiding those traits.) Iβm sorry this point was not clear enough.
Also, I have been answering questions and adding a lot of clarification in the comments and reblogs here, but Iβd like to address some of the points that keep coming up:
π΄ A βblood sportβ is any sport or entertainment that involves intense fighting, bloodshed, and/or risk of death. There is a list of bloodsports on the Wikipedia page here. (I would highly recommend not looking too far into the animal-related ones as they are very upsetting. The 17th-18th century Europeans were barbaric.) A blood sport does not always entail βmaking animals fight each other.β See for example bullfighting, which involves a human fighting a bull. The bloodsport listed under fancy rats alludes to βrat-baitingβ which involved throwing a bunch of rats in a pit for a terrier to kill, and taking bets on how long it took the dog to kill all the rats. This is not necessarily what they were domesticated for, but this was what led to fancy rats eventually being domesticated. The prettiest, nicest rats were spared from the pit, dressed in ribbons, and became pets.
π I somehow forgot to add βbloodsportβ under chickens, as well as βlivestock guarding, companionshipβ under African/Chinese Geese. This was a lot of information to keep track of at once. :T Some breeds of chickens were definitely bred specifically for cockfighting, and African and Chinese Geese also make good guard animals.
π While only some of the animals here have βcompanionshipβ listed under βbred for,β all of them could technically be kept for companionship. Those are just the species which have been specifically bred to be pets in the past or currently. While sheep can make good pets, there are no breeds that are specifically bred for that purpose, that I am aware of.
π Asses were named before βassβ became a slang term for buttocks. In fact, the slang term was originally βarse,β a separate word from the animal, but the r was dropped in the 1860s. Etymology is interesting like that, and itβs unfortunate these beautiful endangered equids have to live at the whims of our ever changing vocabulary. Letβs not hold human language against them, eh?
π¦ There are certainly gray areas as to what makes a good pet and what doesnβt, especially when it comes to reptiles and invertebrates. In general, domestic species will always make better pets as they are specifically adapted to live with us and more resources are available for their care. Some reptiles, like corn snakes and bearded dragons, have adapted well to being bred in human care, and are easily tamed. But whether there are domestic non-avian reptiles is a point of contention. There are certainly many being bred in captivity for their colors and markings, but that does not make a species domesticated. Species that do exceedingly well in captivity, are not being captured from the wild to bolster the pet trade, and donβt have specialized diets or at least donβt have diets that are hard to replicate and make easily accessible to pet owners, are usually fine to keep as pets. (I myself have a corn snake, sand boa, crested gecko, and tarantulas.) Itβs definitely a case by case basis. But youβre not gonna have as hard a time figuring out the ethics of keeping a particular pet if itβs a species thatβs fully domesticated.
π Oh yeah, and my examples at the end of the infograph were meant to be examples of unethical breeding and not examples of unethical breeds, but I unfortunately wasnβt clear about that. Spider is a morph of ball python, not a breed. There are no breeds of non-avian reptile, merely morphs which are aesthetic colors and/or patterns.
π« There are three species of camel alive today: the Domestic Dromedary, the Domestic Bactrian, and the Wild Bactrian. However, both wild ancestors of the Domestic Dromedary and the Domestic Bactrian are extinct. The Wild Bactrian was originally thought to be the ancestor of the Domestic Bactrian, but genetic studies have shown that these species diverged before humans were even a Thing. So, yes, there are still wild camels, but the Wild Bactrians are critically endangered and pretty rare. Most βwildβ populations of camel today are actually feral.
π²π½ I was also a little confused about axolotls while researching this. The Aztecs did not domesticate them as far as I could find; they just hunted them. Scientists took them to France for scientific research and due to their high capacity for breeding and hybridization with tiger salamanders their gene pool is now quite different from that of wild axolotls. I listed βmeatβ in their βbred forβ section because I found that they were raised for food in Japan, but apparently it is just this one specific restaurant in Osaka that serves them.
π΄ Like Wild and Domestic bactrian camels, Domestic Horses and Przewalskiβs Horses diverged long before the domestication of the horse. There were apparently some attempts to domesticate Przewalskiβs Horses in history, possibly resulting in the Botai horses, but the living population has never been domesticated, according to the most recent studies.
π Cats are fully domesticated. They are very different from African Wildcats. They are not semi-domesticated or semi-wild, and they should not be allowed to roam outdoors unsupervised both for their own health and safety and the health of the environment.
still a theatre kid, sorry @elaeomyxa - Tumblr Blog | Tumgag