And what does this crap bring to any thread?
[doublepost=1539856601,1539849519][/doublepost]Killing for food or for security reasons are really non negotiable. If a person believes they or their family members are at risk, (even if that belief is born of their own stupidity or lack of education).
Killing animals for 'fun' is a learned behaviour and though I think Sdaji is correct in that schools do already promote good animal welfare the type of psychopath that finds it fun to kill for no reason has learned this lack of morals/respect somewhere, normally the parents through their own irrational fears. Education is the only way to reduce the reckless killing.
I think it is a false belief that humans have no innate joy or love of killing animals. It would be completely bizarre if it wasn't in human nature to enjoy killing animals. When I find a tree covered in ripe berries, I feel great joy and I gleefully pick them. I like to see similar joy in people's faces in situations like that. We feel that way because our brain stimulates pleasure centres in the brain as a reward for finding food which will help our goals of survival, reproduction and social status. Even in a crazy world of political correctness and mind warping, almost everyone will agree with what I'm saying about the berries.
In the natural world where our DNA and instincts were being shaped and created, killing an animal meant much the same thing as finding a tree covered in berries, except more so. The food was of higher value and the social status rewards were greater, not only because you're bringing back better food value, but because people are more impressed by the skills of a successful hunt than someone who conquered a tree. Thus, we have strong drives to kill animals, and it is only through a distortion of the natural world in the modern world that people are often completely disconnected from that and develop a view of animals as auxilliary humans, along with being taught from a young age that killing or hurting them is bad and we should feel ashamed if we like it, etc etc.
Despite being obviously correct, the above has probably alienated most of the people who read it.
There are, of course, all sorts of reasons for having a desire or aversion to killing and/or harming animals, with good and bad ones on both sides, and some people have primarily bad reasons for wanting to kill, and pretty much all reasons for wanting to inflict pain and suffering are bad, but there are plenty of completely normal, natural, healthy instincts in most normal humans, especially males, for killing animals and finding it pleasurable.
Probably more truth than most people can handle, perhaps anyone else, but there it is.
And for the record, I personally have a very strong desire not to see anything suffer, even the worst criminals (I'm all for capital punishment in extreme cases but never for the 'string 'em up in public and make them suffer while we all watch' type mentality, which is remarkably common). I have no problem with killing animals for practical purposes as long as it's done as humanely as reasonably possible, and I don't think it's a problem if someone enjoys hunting. It requires a very strong disconnection from basic reality not to understand why normal humans can find pleasure in hunting or to think that it must be a learned behaviour.