Fire Metal
Zooville Settler
A woman by the name of Denise Frazier has been arrested in Mississippi for videos she made having sex with a few of her male dogs. I've seen the videos and they don't constitute as animal abuse by any means (by our standards at least.) As a zoophile myself, I feel both sorry for her and angry at the same time. Her idiotic mistake was that she posted videos on Snapchat, full face, and was selling those videos as like a doggie OnlyFans. (Which, I mean... I'd subscribe) Someone saw the videos and got screen shots of her soliciting selling those videos. An absolute IDIOTIC move!
This lead me to find out about KnottyFairy and actually MANY other people on Twitter that openly "say" they're zoophiles. I don't really know what to feel about it because the backlash on Denise Frazier was ROUGH. Saying things like it's abuse, it's the most disturbing case the police have ever investigated, scenes are "so graphic" that they can't even discuss them, and that she's posted at $25,000 bail and she could face 10 YEARS IN PRISON. The reply videos and comment sections are WAY worse.
People can technically say whatever they want about how they live their lives as zoo, but video proof of the act is still highly illegal. Is overexposure on social media going to gain us favor and desensitize people to something that's really just a beautiful and natural act, or is this just another case of Whitney Wisconsin and setting us back even further?
This lead me to find out about KnottyFairy and actually MANY other people on Twitter that openly "say" they're zoophiles. I don't really know what to feel about it because the backlash on Denise Frazier was ROUGH. Saying things like it's abuse, it's the most disturbing case the police have ever investigated, scenes are "so graphic" that they can't even discuss them, and that she's posted at $25,000 bail and she could face 10 YEARS IN PRISON. The reply videos and comment sections are WAY worse.
People can technically say whatever they want about how they live their lives as zoo, but video proof of the act is still highly illegal. Is overexposure on social media going to gain us favor and desensitize people to something that's really just a beautiful and natural act, or is this just another case of Whitney Wisconsin and setting us back even further?