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When we think about the plague epidemic in Europe in the Middle Ages, we can say that the main reason was the mass slaughter of cats. They were slaughtered all over Europe. It is clear that love for animals has nothing to do with nationality. I think the more you read, the more your inner vision develops. Reading develops not only the brain, but also the heart. Please look at the issue you are talking about from this point of view. Best
42 sats \ 6 replies \ @drlh 27 Sep
In this context it has to do with religion. Ancient egypt loved cats much. Christianity condemned the egypteean religion, so the cats.
Still Cyprus has more cats than people.
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sometimes religion can help animals for sure, aren't the Turks famous for liking cats too?
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Unfortunately, no. The level of education in Turkey is low. Result: Pervasive animal dislike. Finally, the law on the slaughter of stray dogs was passed by the parliament...
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fuck, that's sad, i always see youtube shorts of people being nice to cats in Turkey and thought it was like a national thing. usually, these things are from Istabull tho so maybe more of a localised thing , or just social media bias
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Yes, exactly. I have a lot of neighbors who are angry with me because I feed about 20 cats.
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I don't think it has anything to do with religion either. Because superstitions were the reason for the slaughter of cats in the Middle Ages. No religion likes superstitions. (By the way, I believe that there is actually only one religion that exists under different names)
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12th century tho. I can say for sure they were trying to oppose ancient religions in all ways they could in ancient time, with far reaching echoes.
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