Animal mating consent

Are all animal sexual encounters rape? Does the male typically take what he wants if he feels secure in getting away with it? How do we, as humans, stray away from this primal desire?

  1. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    You did notice that its a female cat kicking the shit out of a very clear male on the right, right?
    Just saying became female domestic cat do not rape, they get raped tho. A lot. I once had a 3 years old tabby female and brought in a 3 months old black male cat. The lil nig was forcing himself on my girl not two weeks later. She clearly didn't like it, whenever I walked into the room while it was happening she would scream the most pathetic miaou of pls help you ever heard. Really didn't think I'd ever utter the sentence
    > "Theo, stop raping your sister RIGHT NOW"
    Thought even less my gf would burst laughing at hearing me saying that.
    Anyway, the lady cat in your picrel is having none of it tho and its triggering me.
    You trigger me OP.
    gudjob

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      >Just saying became
      *because. sorry didn't sleep last night.

  2. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous
  3. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    It seems like the majority of sexual encounters between animals are voluntary actually

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      there is a reason we see man as evil and have a hateboner for other apes

      and birds. holy fuck birds are pure evil. just like us.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        its only really ducks that rape when it come to birds (though females are larger in a lot of cases)

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Lots of birds have voluntary relations and adorable lifelong pair bonds.

  4. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    All penetrative sex is fundamentally rape.

  5. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    No. Wolves in particular are rapeproofed. They only have regret rape which is why they evolved the knot.

    Truly the white people of the forest

  6. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Bonobo matriarch make gangs to beat up male rapists

  7. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    how did you make it to 18 without at least learning why some male birds look cool and the females look boring?

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      it's so the cool ones get away with rape, right?

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Females (usually) choose to mate with males that can sing good and are brightly colored, because that means they're healthy enough to harass a kitty without getting eaten.

  8. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >Never heard of mating dances
    Buddy keep your rape fetishism plugged in

  9. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    if everything is rape then nothing is rape

  10. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >offer sperm to female spider
    >she declines it and eats you
    >if she accepts it then there are decent odds of you being eaten anyways
    no

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      so just edge to the point of cumming and just shove it in the biggest female spider while she's sleeping

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        that's basically how tarantulas do it minus the sleep rape
        >produce what's called a sperm web, which is web+jizz
        >load up little boxing glove hands with jizzweb
        >find female
        >tibial hooks on larger arms used to prop up the larger female
        >speedbag her tarantulussy with jizzweb
        >run away to find another female to speedbag, or just chill to die and get eaten, you're dead soon anyway because a male taranutla's lifespan only last a a few months at most after they fully mature and get the boxing glove hands/tibial hooks.

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      H-haha y-yeah how terrible. I'm glad I'm not a spider haha

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      This is why e-boi is the superior choice
      https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsbl.2016.0516
      >Copulatory cannibalism of male ‘widow’ spiders (genus Latrodectus) is a model example of the extreme effects of sexual selection, particularly in L. hasselti and L. geometricus where males typically facilitate cannibalism by females and mate only once. We show that these males can increase their reproductive success by copulating with final-instar, immature females after piercing the female's exoskeleton to access her newly developed sperm storage organs. Females retain sperm through their final moult and have similar fecundity to adult-mated females. This is an adaptive male tactic because immature mating increases insemination success relative to adult mating (which predicts higher paternity) and moreover, rarely ends in cannibalism, so males can mate again. Although successful only during a brief period before the female's final moult, males may employ this tactic when they associate with final-instar females in nature. Consistent with this, one-third of L. hasselti females collected as immatures in nature were already mated. Immature mating alters sexual selection on these otherwise monogynous males, and may explain male traits allowing facultative polygyny in Latrodectus. Since male cohabitation with immature females is common among invertebrates, immature mating may be a widespread, previously unrecognized mating tactic, particularly when unmated females are of high reproductive value.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        have a nice day now

  11. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    no, there's usually some sort of courtship involved

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