Didn't Steam
just have a huge sale? Now there's this Winter Sale business and pretty much everything on my wishlist is discounted.
...In other news, WTF are half of these games on my wishlist? I skipped to the bottom of the list in search of a particular game, and there is a tonne of weird shit on here that I don't remember ever seeing before, haha. And
almost all of it is so freaking cheap. Probably was a bad idea to glance at my wishlist right now. I have a feeling there is much unhealthy spending in my future. >.>
1) Animals are friends, not food (and associated "all meat is cruelty" and other hyperbole)
No, sorry. Not buying it. Having raised food animals free range in my youth, and personally knowing people that still do, no. Just no. If you want to believe that, you can join the ranks of other irrational belief holders, but you wont be able to convince me you are right. I will budge a little, and agree that most food animals are grown in abysmal conditions-- but most is not *all*. I do just as much to help combat factory farming by buying exclusively from known free range growers as you do by boycotting meat entirely.
So you're calling me "irrational", yet failing to explain just why you consider such beliefs irrational?
Also - you've known people involved in the meat industry all your life, so that makes it okay?
That's... I'm sorry, but that is some of the dumbest reasoning I've ever heard. If everyone thought that way there would be no progress. And this may surprise you, but you're not the only one who has experienced such things. I spent an unfortunate amount of my childhood in a rural area, encountering plenty of farmers and what-have-you, and my father apparently grew up on a farm. Hell, my high school had a cattle farm on-campus! It really doesn't get much more hicktacular than that.
I never had m/any vegetarians and such amongst my family or friends, either, as far as I can recall.
The thing is, I have this strange habit of doing something called "thinking for myself". I assess and judge things based on the data available to me and make my own decisions, rather than simply accepting whatever is considered the norm by my family and peers. It saddens me that so many people refuse to do so, often even becoming angry when their beliefs are challenged. This is most likely usually because, deep down, these people
do in fact have at least a shred of empathy and realise that what they're doing is wrong, but lack the strength of will to make changes and improve their way of life.
Fortunately, it is becoming both easier and more obvious to make such changes all the time. And the number of people who truly fail to see how wrong meat-eating is continues to rapidly decline. I like to remain optimistic, and hold out hope that society will have improved enough to entirely forsake such practices before some sort of catastrophe eventually destroys it.