In canton,many peoples eat rabbit in winter. I think rabbit is so cutie then it's too cruel to eat it.So I never eat rabbit. But the problem is that I also think eating pork and beef is cruel but I like it. How to limit what animals can eat or what animals can't eat? Cutie or not? Human never show mercy to animals. We squeeze it,make use of it,eat it. Sometimes we feed a pet and feel so warm. Actually we just delight in it,one kind of enslave. Now my question is: Is the man who don't eat rabbit more mercy than the man who do eat rabbit?
Can rabbit be eaten?
In Canton, many people eat rabbit in winter.
I think if a rabbit is so cute then it's too cruel to eat it.
How should we choose which animals to eat and which we can't eat?
Does it depend on how cute they are?
Humans never show mercy to animals.
We squeeze them, make use of them and eat them.
Sometimes we feed a pet and it feels so warm.
Actually we just delight in it, one kind of enslavement.
Now my question is: Is the man who doesn't eat rabbit more merciful than the man who does?
In Canton, many people eat rabbit in the winter.
"during the winter" would probably be better.
I think rabbits are very cute and that then it's too cruel to eat them.
This is tricky because of "rabbit" and "rabbits."
"rabbit" can be the food: "I eat rabbit." "Rabbit is tasty." This is the same as "beef" or "pork."
"rabbit" can also be the singular form of rabbit: "I have a rabbit." (Note the article "a" before it indicating singular."
"rabbits" is the plural form. "I have many rabbits." "Rabbits are cute." (Note you would not say "Rabbit is cute," as in English when speaking about something in general, you use the plural. "rabbits are cute," "cats are cute," "ducks are cute," etc.
This gets tricky because you get things like:
"I like rabbit." In English, this means you like the taste of rabbit meat. Usually it's used to mean "I like eating rabbit."
"I like rabbits." In English, this would indicate that you like the animal.
Hopefully this helps!
Humans never show mercy to animals.
(Same edit as gc3195. I'm just highlighting the change.)
We squeeze them, make use of them, and eat them.
Since "animals" is your subject and it is plural, you use "them" instead of "it."
(Same edit as gc3195. I'm just highlighting the changes and adding a note.)
Sometimes we feed a pet and we feel happy.
I think this might be what you were aiming for? But maybe you meant what gc3195 corrected to.
"it feels so warm" -> The pet feels warm.
"we feel happy" -> You feel happy because you fed the pet.
Actually we just delight in it, one kind of enslavement.
gc3195's edit with changes highlighted.
Now my question is: is the man who doesn't eat rabbit more merciful than the man who does eat rabbit?
I only changed "do" to "does" because it was the only mistake there, but gc3195's edit "the man who does." is a better to say it.
I don't think having pets is enslavement, though. I have two cats, and they are very happy. =)