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| 02 Dec 2011 03:14 PM |
Besides neglecting solid biological proof, the only way humans aren't like animals is that -unlike other animals, we don't work together. -we are the only species to have massively wiped out giant populations of ourselves.
I could continue to make snooty comebacks, but you get the point. |
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FIRECAKE
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Rawkel
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:15 PM |
| i'm embarrassed to be a human now |
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FIRECAKE
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:17 PM |
| Whereas the stupider ones are harder to kill. |
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Rawkel
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:17 PM |
@TheHumanGuest the second one |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:18 PM |
| Why do you think that I am unintelligent? |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:21 PM |
| The title doesn't need to be fixed. |
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giroom
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:23 PM |
| what if animal has more than one meaning |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:23 PM |
| Humans are definitely animals, biologically speaking, and that was my point. |
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shadowi83
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shadowi83
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:27 PM |
"Excuse me, but we do work in groups. Unless you wish to classify the nomadic hunter gatherers of Europe as a different type of human, they quite certainly needed to work in groups in order to chase reindeer, horses, etc of cliffs in order to kill them." Humans generally work for the benefit of themselves.
"Also, ever heard of Wolbachia? It's a parasite that can destroy entire fly populations in large areas. Atop of that, in Texas we can see that horses have been able to almost destroy the grass population." I didn't know that parasites and flies and horses and grass were of the same species. |
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shadowi83
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:35 PM |
"I simply stated that Wolbachia can destroy fly populations, and that horses have destroyed grass populations." You you just felt the need to add random information; what is your point in posting this? |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:37 PM |
@SierraTheGreat
Well, you or somebody said that humans destroy populations. He's saying that humans aren't the only ones that destroy populations. |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:38 PM |
"Well, you or somebody said that humans destroy populations. He's saying that humans aren't the only ones that destroy populations." I said giant populations of ourselves, not giant populations of different species. |
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Enirb
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:40 PM |
Chimpanzees. Seriously, they destroy entire colonies of their own species. Google Chimpanzee xenophobia |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:41 PM |
I thought everyone with half a brain already knew this information, but I guess I was wrong...
~Vast machines, for my relief, gotta watch it all burn~ |
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| 02 Dec 2011 03:42 PM |
"I thought everyone with half a brain already knew this information, but I guess I was wrong..." Yes, you were definitely wrong, because people are arguing about this. |
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