2007-01-08
09:14:18
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10 answers
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asked by
T
2
in
Pets
➔ Birds
blondie you loose
2007-01-08
09:19:05 ·
update #1
oldncrabby you loose
2007-01-08
09:20:07 ·
update #2
blabster91 you loose
2007-01-08
09:20:39 ·
update #3
frankgmartin's you really loose. They ar not poked or provoked and they are in big cages of on teepees. Do you reasearch and not just listen to PETA because everything that PETA says about cockfighting is a lie. Just do your research and you would know the truth.
2007-01-08
09:22:47 ·
update #4
is in their nature....i can tell you from experience..fighting "gamecock" or fighting chickens are a different race from normal farm chickens. they are not eatible. cant eat them because their meat is to hard. my dad used to have 50+ of this kinda of chickens in my country, and my brother and i used to help him with them. their is training involved if you want a winning rooster(c0ck sounds weird) stamina, fast reflects, powerful kicks, vitamins, style, all must be worked on to be on top. usually the males are the only fighter ones, i guess to defend their territory, but, believe or not, hens would go at it to, if another hen is treating their territory. thats why you keep each one in different cages. hens and roosters, or they would kill each other
2007-01-09 02:32:40
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Roosters will generally scuffle with each other to become the dominant bird. The fighting roosters are simply more aggressive because over hundreds of years, they've been selectively bred. In a rural setting, these birds can still run away and only suffer a few scrapes. In the confines of the ring and with razor sharp blades attached to the spur, it is at times a real death match. We used let ours roam free and they act like normal chickens and are actually very docile and pampered. My grandpa would stroke and bathe them to keep em looking their best but we do not fight them. We don't keep any now. Unfortunately, it's gambling which fuels this sport, just like the dog races. The problem for me is gamling and gamblers.
2007-01-08 17:41:09
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answer #2
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answered by aken 4
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Gamecocks do what they naturally do in the wild, fight. If they don't fight they get anxious, when 2 of them meet they fight because is just instinct.
2007-01-08 09:19:15
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answer #3
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answered by Frank the tank 7
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Forced!
2007-01-08 09:18:40
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answer #4
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answered by wish I were 6
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They want to fight, it would be impossible to force them to.
However, that doesn't mean that putting two animals together that you know will hurt each other in order to watch them do so is alright. It is incredibly mean.
2007-01-08 09:27:53
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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they are forced to fight it is in their nature to do so.they are special breeds which live to fight(mostly to their deaths)
2007-01-09 00:21:10
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answer #6
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answered by arul 2
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i think they are forced to fight since they are so violent about it
2007-01-08 09:18:57
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answer #7
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answered by blabster91 2
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they are trained to fight by incredibly cruel people. they do it because they were taught that anything that moves is the enemy. so they attack the enemy.
2007-01-08 09:16:30
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answer #8
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answered by blondie 2
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Its their nature.
2007-01-08 09:16:20
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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i would say because they want to
2007-01-08 09:16:37
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answer #10
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answered by Sammy T 2
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