Wednesday, March 22, 2017

If it's alive, you cherish it.

(Note: The ideas in this report are from this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGA9V4Eaij4&feature=youtu.be of which I do not own copyright.)

Many see that Humans are the Alpha species. Everything must submit to us, everything must be in service of us. And that is true, for the most part.

Humans never cease to seek, discover, and develop. Were constantly evolving, and to evolve means new everything. The consistent search for more and new is linked to the instinct of survival. In order to survive, The Alpha Species is apparently forced to make sacrifices.

Pharmaceutical drugs, laundry detergents, bug sprays, they arent simply manufactured in legitimate factories, approved by higher corporations in seconds, and then delivered to local salesmen. Ever wondered How do they get those products approved? Whats the process?

See, getting chemical products approved is like reaching the thesis of a project. And there is no thesis without an experiment to prove its validity. So, before distributing possibly hazardous and poisonous output to citizens, they are tested beforehand. Undoubtedly, not on a human. Too precious. So instead, they are injected into the next species on the food chain. Animals.

Chemicals. Intoxicating chemicals. They are pumped into helpless creatures. The purpose behind this procedure, Animal Testing, is clear so far. To keep humans safe. Better an animal than a living soul, right? Watching a video demonstrating the amount of cruelty and heartless efforts put into subduing frightened animals, says otherwise. The corporations responsible for such hideous actions are not doing so for the sake of human-preservation. Its to avoid lawsuits and bankruptcy, plain and simple.

Now, if it really were for more selfless reasons, one would think that: no selfless person in their right mind and possession of a working conscious, would dare to lay a finger on poor and powerless creatures. It is downright inhuman, in every sense of the word. Cats, dogs, pigs, mice, monkeys, sheep, horses all of them and many more, tortured. No anesthesia used in the process because of course, anesthesia clouds the results. They were probed, and operated on. Beaten senseless to the point of paralysis. Watching the disturbing footage made only one thing clear: The people doing this are absolute twisted sadists, thriving off inflicting pain on the weak. Thats the only logical explanation to why one would do that for a living.

The animals are treated as disposable trash, expendables that can be replaced anytime for more agonizing experiments.

The most awful part of it all, was how those animals seemed to resemble humans. They were terrified, scared to their core, confused, weak, and some appeared to have given up, surrendered. Are those not human emotions? Do we not raise the majority of those animals as family?

Are they not crucial to our survival? And yet here we are, building labs, special rooms for their torment, and why? To assure our safety. The irony should not escape the mind, much like common human ethics apparently have.

This isnt a one-way-street, and we shouldnt think so. The alternative is quite simple. Consult the source. Every issue always has one. These foul actions are justified by the fact that these chemicals shouldnt pass on to citizens without authorization which requires experiments. The question is: why must there be such horrendous substances involved in the first place just to do laundry, or powder a nose, or help cure a fever?

Even then, the bottles almost always have use with caution, use with gloves, on the labels. People are basically buying acids that are bad for them. But, at least they keep their floor and clothes clean.


There is a better alternative. It was just overlooked perhaps because it was too merciful and easy. Natural elements. They are much, much more affective and long-lasting. They dont have lethal side-effects and are after all, nature-born, just like Humans. It is always easier and simpler (and cheaper) to have ethics, rather than a room of pain.

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