Bestiality -bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -vhs... [99% Genuine]

For most of human history, the answer was simple: very little. Animals were tools, resources, or nuisances. The first major ethical rupture came from utilitarians like Jeremy Bentham, who in 1789 dismissed the old question—Can they reason? Can they talk?—and posed the one that still haunts us: Can they suffer?

Consider the case of Happy, an Asian elephant at the Bronx Zoo. The Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP) filed a habeas corpus petition—traditionally a legal tool for an imprisoned person to challenge unlawful detention—on her behalf, arguing that her cognitive complexity and autonomy warranted release to a sanctuary. The New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, ultimately ruled against Happy. She remains at the zoo. But the dissenting opinion was extraordinary: Judge Jenny Rivera argued that the majority’s logic was “circular,” refusing to consider Happy’s personhood simply because the law had never done so before. Bestiality -Bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -Vhs...

The animal welfare advocate says: regulate the crate, enrich the environment, mandate stunning, end the worst abuses now. The animal rights advocate says: no amount of velvet on the shackle makes it just. The pragmatist says: follow the technology. The heart says: look into the eyes of a dog, a pig, an elephant—and tell me there is no one there. For most of human history, the answer was

This is not a philosophical quibble. It is a clash of worldviews with profound consequences. Can they talk

The industry is terrified and intrigued. In 2023, the USDA approved the sale of cultivated chicken for the first time. It will take decades, if not generations, for these products to replace conventional meat. But for the first time, the abolitionist dream of a world without factory farms—without any farms, in the traditional sense—is technologically plausible.