grapecape: ([anonymous - tent])
Ondorus ([personal profile] grapecape) wrote2013-02-23 11:27 pm

009; ANONYMOUS text

What makes Pokemon different from humans?

When a human has a desire, they collect Pokemon and go to fulfill it. That is how this world works.

When a Pokemon has a desire, what do they do?

Why must the free lives of Pokemon be the cost of a human's wish to act?

Who decided that Pokemon were possessions to be bought and sold and bartered with?

All beings think and feel and wish.

Please consider this.


[[ooc: Replies will often be short because he's trying to obscure his typing style and avoid any clues as to his identity. Threadjacking is fine!]]
whateveryoueatliveitspart: (serious)

[Video forever]

[personal profile] whateveryoueatliveitspart 2013-02-26 04:46 am (UTC)(link)
Pokémon and humans are the same. The only difference is that they have different bodies.

When one of the Pokémon with me wants something, I usually don't try and stop them. [Except when they want him to buy them TMs, because those are way too expensive for him to buy regularly. And he's still kind of leery about the whole battling thing and tries to dissuade them from that, but aside from that...] It seems like not everyone else does the same thing though.

I don't like how people ask for money for Pokémon eggs. If they're sending them to people who aren't near a Pokémon Center I guess it's okay, since it might be a lot of work for whoever delivers them, but most people seem to treat the eggs like they're Potions in the stores and not living things. You can't own living things. They belong to themselves. I haven't hear anyone trying to sell Pokémon who have already hatched though, so maybe people just don't realize that they're alive even when they're in eggs. [He'll try and be generous and give people the benefit of the doubt there.]