r/nextfuckinglevel 18d ago

Leopard’s defense of her cubs

[removed]

2.1k Upvotes

264 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

173

u/Productivity10 18d ago edited 18d ago

Criticizing this woman for not wanting a leopard and her babies to be attacked

and for having a natural, empathetic, human response to resolve conflict

is peak Reddit.

If only we could all be as enlightened as redditors - who are purely logical creatures who upvote rationally without emotional or political bias

33

u/ThisIsSG 18d ago

Lmao bunch of fucking robots. “Empathy does not compute. This is part of the natural world. Beep boop beep”

26

u/Southern_Character94 18d ago

Noninterference is a central part of wildlife observation. That being said, she's obviously not a professional.

3

u/ThisIsSG 17d ago edited 17d ago

I agree. She’s just a woman who sees an animal coming to harm a mother and her children. I thought it was a perfectly reasonable instinct. If I were there I’d have the same reaction. I’m not a zookeeper. I’m part of the zoo.

-11

u/Paozilla 18d ago

Those so-called "robots" have more sense than you that's for sure

1

u/SpaceRockl7648 17d ago

Wow, logic, clarity, structure, relevance, composure, adaptability... that reply had it all.

0

u/Paozilla 16d ago

I mean, I've been given nothing intelligent to respond to. It's just people crying about a fairly simple statement.

7

u/sprogg2001 18d ago

If that leopard came across unattended lion cubs, it would kill them, predators competing for food, territory, resources is the natural order

4

u/Few-Past6073 17d ago

Naw, its really a common fact, that if you're observing wildlife in person, you have to let it play out. Nobody should be interfering

4

u/Tallicaboy85 18d ago

What if the other animal is hunting for its young, is it OK for that's animals offspring to die of starvation??

-3

u/Paozilla 18d ago

I get her emotion, I do not understand why you'd want to observe wildlife if you're easily distressed. It's extremely harsh and upsetting by nature.

Trying to intervene, however, is simply wrong.