Topic: Вestiality (zoophilia).
smart2009's photo
Wed 11/28/12 08:05 AM
Edited by smart2009 on Wed 11/28/12 08:07 AM
Germany's ruling coalition is calling for a ban on bestiality - or the practice of having sex with animals.
The German parliament's agriculture committee is considering makingit an offence not only to hurt an animal but also to force it into unnatural sex. Offenders could face a hefty fine.
A final vote will be held in the Bundestag (lower house) on 14 December.
Germany legalised bestiality (zoophilia) in 1969, except when the animal suffered"significant harm".
But animal rights groups have campaigned for a change in the law and Hans-Michael Goldmann, the head of the parliamentary committee investigating the new amendment, told the Tageszeitung newspaper that thenew legislation wasintended to clarify the current legal position.
"With this explicit ban, it will be easier to impose penalties and to improve animal protection."
A fine of up to 25,000 euros (£20,000) is proposed if someone forces an animal to commit"actions alien to the species".
We see animals as partners and not as a means ofgratification
Michael Kiok, Chairman, Zeta
But Michael Kiok, the chairman of thepressure group Zoophile Engagement for Tolerance and Information (Zeta), said he was going to take legal action to fight the proposed changes.
"It is unthinkable that any sexual act with an animal is punished without proof that the animal has come to any harm," he said, adding that animals are capableof showing what they do, or do not, want to do.
"We see animals as partners and not as a means of gratification. We don't force them to do anything. Animals are much easier to understand than women," Mr Kiok claimed.
Bestiality is bannedin many European countries, includingthe Netherlands, France and Switzerland.
The law was changed in the UK in 2003, which reduced the maximum sentencefrom life imprisonment to two years.
The act however, is permissible in Belgium, Denmark and Sweden, though Stockholm is considering a change in the legislation.
surprised

smart2009's photo
Wed 11/28/12 08:08 AM
SICK GERMANS...

no photo
Wed 11/28/12 08:11 AM
That's baaaaaaad.

smart2009's photo
Wed 11/28/12 08:25 AM
Edited by smart2009 on Wed 11/28/12 08:26 AM
Ahnenerbe? rofl

Sussy69's photo
Wed 11/28/12 08:52 AM
Why wld anyone sleep wit an animal......its absurd......its crazy

TBRich's photo
Wed 11/28/12 09:01 AM

Why wld anyone sleep wit an animal......its absurd......its crazy


It is a misdemeanor here in Pennsylvania. I have had to deal with horses, dogs and alligators. Who knows why and worked with them for 13 years.

RoamingOrator's photo
Wed 11/28/12 09:53 AM
"Animals are much easier to understand than women," Mr Kiok claimed. laugh



The man's got a point. :tongue:

smart2009's photo
Wed 11/28/12 10:23 AM
rofl

no photo
Wed 11/28/12 03:42 PM

Germany's ruling coalition is calling for a ban on bestiality - or the practice of having sex with animals.
The German parliament's agriculture committee is considering makingit an offence not only to hurt an animal but also to force it into unnatural sex. Offenders could face a hefty fine.
A final vote will be held in the Bundestag (lower house) on 14 December.
Germany legalised bestiality (zoophilia) in 1969, except when the animal suffered"significant harm".
But animal rights groups have campaigned for a change in the law and Hans-Michael Goldmann, the head of the parliamentary committee investigating the new amendment, told the Tageszeitung newspaper that thenew legislation wasintended to clarify the current legal position.
"With this explicit ban, it will be easier to impose penalties and to improve animal protection."
A fine of up to 25,000 euros (£20,000) is proposed if someone forces an animal to commit"actions alien to the species".
We see animals as partners and not as a means ofgratification
Michael Kiok, Chairman, Zeta
But Michael Kiok, the chairman of thepressure group Zoophile Engagement for Tolerance and Information (Zeta), said he was going to take legal action to fight the proposed changes.
"It is unthinkable that any sexual act with an animal is punished without proof that the animal has come to any harm," he said, adding that animals are capableof showing what they do, or do not, want to do.
"We see animals as partners and not as a means of gratification. We don't force them to do anything. Animals are much easier to understand than women," Mr Kiok claimed.
Bestiality is bannedin many European countries, includingthe Netherlands, France and Switzerland.
The law was changed in the UK in 2003, which reduced the maximum sentencefrom life imprisonment to two years.
The act however, is permissible in Belgium, Denmark and Sweden, though Stockholm is considering a change in the legislation.
surprised



People, increasingly, are equating themselves with animals.

Many are becoming insatiably lustful toward the unthinkable and forbidden things.

This is a sign of the times.

willing2's photo
Wed 11/28/12 03:54 PM
I know one clan that law won't set well with.

They have their own rules for screwing th' pooch.