Mercy for Animals has a vested interest in making this sort of a video . . . it does not necessarily follow that the video is fabricated, or that the actors on the video share that vested interest.
Mercy for Animals has a vested interest in making this sort of a video . . . it does not necessarily follow that the video is fabricated, or that the actors on the video share that vested interest.
I'm sorry, but I don't get how you came up with "if A can happen, then B cannot." Unless that's how you're classifying my assertion that the video was staged as a declaration that real animal abuse never happens. I didn't say that. There are enough news articles on real cases of animal abuse to know that it is real.
We know that leftists have a long history of pretending they are members of conservative groups, so that they can display the outrageous behavior they always accuse us of, thereby "proving" that we act that way.
To believe the video is genuine, we'd have to believe that an animal rights activist actually desired a farm job (which they would normally avoid like vampires avoid sunlight), and then witnessed abuse and decided to go public with it (instead of going to the boss or calling authorities), and that the abusers didn't notice that someone was following them around with a camera. It's highly unlikely.