I’m Google

Add: Google search (link to Amazon, free download)
I am Google. That is, I am a search engine. Not as quick. Not as commercial either.

I am a search engine searching for the truth. Not a religious truth. Not a false truth. A true truth.

But the truth is not enough.

I also need to find ways to share the truth.

But even that is not enough.

The truth must inspire. Action must lead to change, change that brings about the true world.

A better world is not enough. We are searching for the one and only, the best world, the true world.

For only the true world is truly true rather than false. There are many false worlds, endlessly many in fact, but there is only one true world.

The true world is not just factually true. Any world is factually true.

Above all, the true world is morally true. The true world is how it ought to be. It is the best possible world.

The true world is one. It is a united world. A harmonious world. A good world.

Good for us, good for them, good for all living things that care about the world. They belong to us. We belong to them. Their world is ours. Our world is theirs.

We must share the true world, in a way that is best for all.

Let’s be search engines. Let’s be googling for the true world. That is the best we can do.

Add:

Add: Peters Equal Area World (link to Amazon)

Hello again

Hello again.

I’ve been away for some time now. I guess I was disappointed about the limited net effect of my efforts to support animal welfare through this website. I built a value shop, launched a campaign to make science more animal-minded and tried to raise support to set Yuyee free. I haven’t seen much impact from my efforts. Hence, I need to switch gears.

My plan now is to regularly write a small post on this site as a way to express myself. This first post, therefore, is to say ‘Hello again’. If you don’t like what I do, please remember I do it for you too. But if you do, please realize you can support me too.

I hope we’ll be in touch.

Bye for now,

Animaximo, @AnimalMinded

Purpose in life

In search for one’s purpose in life you may ask yourself five simple questions:

1. Who am I?
2. What do I do?
3. Who do I do it for?
4. What do they need?
5. How do I make a difference?

Animal welfare can be a purpose in life. If so, you may want incorporate animal welfare in your personal or professional life, or you may join an animal welfare organization. However, if you are not sure yet, or if you have tried it, but have started to wonder whether you are on the right track, it could be most valuable to have a purpose-in-life conversation or workshop addressing questions like these:

* What is the purpose of having a purpose in life?
* What is a life worth living?
* Do animals have a purpose in life?
* How important is animal welfare?
* Can animal welfare be my purpose in life?
* How?

You may indicate interest in the comment box below.

 

Book: Education for animal welfare

Book: A dog's purpose

Purpose in life related book: Good natured

Urgent

If I had one more day to live. What would I do? Or better, what should I do?

Should I visit family and friends? If only I were a person person, I guess I should say goodbye. But I am not, i.e. people are not all important for me Actually, no person or place ought to be in dire need of seeing another, when having had ample opportunities to do so in the years before So, no, if I had one more day to live, I shouldn’t spend the time on family and friends.

What about visiting new places I haven’t seen before? I’m sorry, but the same argument applies here. If you haven’t seen it by the time you die, it’s probably not worth it, unless, of course, you have forgotten to live while you could. In any case, I wouldn’t be able to enjoy visiting a new place with so little time left.

Perhaps I would like to say something about what I should or should not have done in my life, or I might want to say something about how I would like the world to be. The latter is certainly the case. I would like to see the world become a better place, inhabited by people who care more for what they do to other sentient beings, esp. what they do to non-human animals.

I have spent my life in an environment where the status quo has been over-protected. I have accepted social pressures severely limiting my freedom of speech in a way I have always considered to be morally unacceptable. Yet, for the sake of job, social and financial security, I have let ‘them’ make me silent. I’ve tried to improve the world for animals from within. With little or no success. I have failed in many respects. So, if I only had one more day to live, I would like to say: “Please, be aware of the fact that animals matter morally; that they deserve our respect, and that practices involving deliberately-inflicted animal suffering such as castration, debeaking and tail docking should stop immediately, despite the apparently counter-intuitive suggestion that these procedures are sometimes conducted for the so-called benefit of the animals too. They are not.”

 

Classic book calling for urgent action: Animal liberation

Classic book: The case for animal rights

Book: The unheeded cry