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Amazing pictures.
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<blockquote data-quote="INFERNO" data-source="post: 4811952" data-attributes="member: 9617"><p><img src="https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/1048899_10151517953138111_2068886025_o.jpg" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p></p><p>photo: Wallace Kirkland for Life magazine</p><p></p><p>"The inner essence of fascism and totalitarianism, of atrocity, lies not in ideology as such, but in willed actions whose purpose is to show that there are no limits to what can be done to the individual, or even to entire classes of individuals. What finally links images of Americans murdering foxes in the Midwest to reports of the Einsatzkommando 3 murdering Jews in Kaunas — or rather, what allows us to recognize atrocity as atrocity, whether perpetrated against human beings or against other animals — is neither the joy, ruthlessness, or simply boredom of the killers, nor the helpless terror, anguish, and suffering of the defenseless victims, but the way the two become conjoined in a mode of action whose symbolic function is to demonstrate the ultimate, absolute superiority of one group over another." </p><p></p><p>— John Sanbonmatsu from his work "The Boy and the Fox: From Beating to Eating Animals"</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="INFERNO, post: 4811952, member: 9617"] [IMG]https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/1048899_10151517953138111_2068886025_o.jpg[/IMG] photo: Wallace Kirkland for Life magazine "The inner essence of fascism and totalitarianism, of atrocity, lies not in ideology as such, but in willed actions whose purpose is to show that there are no limits to what can be done to the individual, or even to entire classes of individuals. What finally links images of Americans murdering foxes in the Midwest to reports of the Einsatzkommando 3 murdering Jews in Kaunas — or rather, what allows us to recognize atrocity as atrocity, whether perpetrated against human beings or against other animals — is neither the joy, ruthlessness, or simply boredom of the killers, nor the helpless terror, anguish, and suffering of the defenseless victims, but the way the two become conjoined in a mode of action whose symbolic function is to demonstrate the ultimate, absolute superiority of one group over another." — John Sanbonmatsu from his work "The Boy and the Fox: From Beating to Eating Animals" [/QUOTE]
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