• @rotopenguin
    link
    English
    65
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    I can kinda see “shot an old horse or two” as being a positive thing, okay you got over the squeamishness of it and did a sick animal a mercy.

    Winging a goat and gosh I gotta go get more ammo to finish this one off, well that’s starting to get a little peculiar.

    LIKING IT SO MUCH THAT YOU WENT OUT AND GOT A NEW PUPPY SO YOU COULD DO IT AGAIN, well hoooly fuck we are getting into something entirely else now aren’t we?

    • @bdonvr@thelemmy.club
      link
      fedilink
      26
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      Yeah sometimes animals need to be put down out in the country.

      But she just completely failed to raise that dog to do what she wanted, completely impatient, then decided the only recourse was to shoot it.

      Then just decided while she was out killin’ to shoot a “mean” goat too? Like if she hadn’t decided to kill the dog she wouldn’t have killed the goat? Bloodlust is what it sounds like.

      • @CucumberFetish@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        132 months ago

        Yeah, putting down a dog that bites people is sometimes the only option, but the way it was worded sounded more like “it wasn’t a golden genius and I didn’t like it, so I shot it instead of putting any effort into training it”

        • @InputZero@lemmy.ml
          link
          fedilink
          18
          edit-2
          2 months ago

          Someone with one brain cell and a shred of morality would re-home the dog first. At least try too. Growing up near farmers it wasn’t uncommon for them to give someone else a dog when that dog was a bad farm dog but could be a family dog. I’ve known farmers and they don’t act like Governor Noem.

          • @SirSamuel@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            92 months ago

            I have a friend that works with a rescue group in Colorado, almost exclusively for cattle dogs. They rescue and re-home the dogs for a variety of reasons. The most prevalent is the dog can’t work anymore and will be put down. That’s it. It got too old and is consuming resources without producing.

            I’m not saying all farmers and ranchers are like this, but the mentality certainly exists. These people see certain life as a commodity only, and it often extends to cruelty to “lower life”. It’s even at the root of calling people who aren’t in their tribe “lower life”, and devaluing them accordingly

            • @InputZero@lemmy.ml
              link
              fedilink
              2
              edit-2
              2 months ago

              Those same farmers I was talking about before have absolutely put down their own animals. They’ve shot their dogs when they’re old and it’s time. One family in particular let their cats “rejoin with nature” aka, just leaving it outside until a predator gets it. I think that’s crewl but I can accept those cats are farm cats, not house cats and had lived ‘in nature’ their whole lives. I’ve even heard about culling day when they plan to shoot the less useful animals. They get the right ammo, carts, make plans for what they will do with the carcass.

              What they don’t do is shoot a young dog because it’s not what they hate it, then follow up with shooting a goat too and are pleased with themselves. That’s a bright red flag for anti-social or psychopathic behavior, I can never remember which is which. The farmers I know see culling their livestock as a task or a burden, but I’ve never heard a farmer tell me they take pleasure from it like Governor Noem did in her book. Unprompted I must add.

      • @Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        English
        7
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        A quote I heard somewhere that always sticks with me “Serial killers will groom themselves to become mass murderers”

        It always starts with something small, and they always move up, at every point knowing full well what’s going on and letting it happen.