IWannaKnow
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2008
- Messages
- 1,725
- Reaction score
- 36
ITA zadari, it is weird and I will go so far as to say sick, gross, disgusting and a perversion against nature, but until we can look it in the eye and call a spade a spade, the lawmakers can't get the recognition and backing they need to put the laws in place to help stop it. There are many sick and gross things going on out there that people don't want to look at or acknowledge because it ruins their day or is a mood killer. We want to be happy and believe that people are essentially good and that "Life is Good" and looking at this crap can be profoundly depressing. But so long as it is allowed to continue existing in the shadows because we are hesitant to drag it out into the light, animals and as Missizzy says children will continue to be abused, degraded, traumatized and traded like commodities. Because these things DO go hand in hand. And animals can't tell you "that bad man touched me"........much like small children. :Bennymonkey:
http://www.tampabay.com/news/courts...iled-to-pass-a-law-banning-bestiality/1092905
Why the state Legislature failed to pass a law banning bestiality
By Cristina Silva, Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In Print: Thursday, May 6, 2010
~BBM
And yet the children are the ones who will ultimately be impacted by the failure to debate this "icky subject". :twocents:
http://www.tampabay.com/news/courts...iled-to-pass-a-law-banning-bestiality/1092905
Why the state Legislature failed to pass a law banning bestiality
By Cristina Silva, Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
In Print: Thursday, May 6, 2010
~BBM
Lawmakers said they didn't want to be accused of wasting time addressing a rare crime when Floridians needed them to help create jobs. They also didn't want to debate the icky subject in public meetings occasionally frequented by children.
And yet the children are the ones who will ultimately be impacted by the failure to debate this "icky subject". :twocents:
A 1971 Florida Supreme Court decision struck down a law written in 1868 that banned animal bestiality on the grounds that is was too vague.
They must prove the suspect violated Florida's animal cruelty law, which prohibits tormenting or hurting an animal.
A separate bill that addressed only animal bestiality never made it to the House floor.
Rep. Mary Brandenburg, D-West Palm Beach, summed up the topic's unpopularity: "It is yucky."