It is done for research, the benefit is the results of that research...

>some dude would casually put his hand inside to fiddle around. How would you feel?

I'd feel terrified by some dude who would do that (casually or otherwise).

But I would not submit, so there would be war: and I'd do anything to put that freak down temporarily or permanently (and worry about the cops later). Because the world is better off with me alive than him if one of us has to die.

cows are unnatural beings who literally can't survive without humans taking care of them.
Unlike pigs who can survive in the wild and turn back in to boars in a couple of generations, cows will die in a single gen because they are so fucked up because of thousands of years of selective breeding.

do you have a source on this? or are you just speaking out of your... uh trapdoor?

feral cows are a thing, they're smaller then their domesticated ancestors, but google suggests they survive on today in alaska, hawaii, and parts of australia. id wager you could find them in india as well

Im not trying to be a smart arse (just a little ill conceed) but im curious what makes you sure they wouldnt survive being released.

The cows in india aren't a good example because people actually take care of them and protect them. They're not really "wild". More like communal pets.

>I'm not a PETA fag I just find it creepy
The two sentences right before this one where you appeal to empathy make it obvious that you're lying.
>Imagine you had a trapdoor to your stomach on your belly and some dude would casually put his hand inside to fiddle around. How would you feel?

I'm surprised you folks haven't heard of this guy.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexis_St._Martin

true, the cultural aspect in india is special, it is actually the reason I would wager on finding them there,

but my point still stands, you can apply for hunting licences for feral cows in the US because they get classed as pests, I found a news story about a farmer getting fined for selling them in AU

I couldnt find anything backing up the idea that they would all die off. obviously the domesticated ones need help with birthing now and then, and gout is an issue when we feed them for super-optimal growth.

i'v heard stories of them ganging up on humans, and they have a herd mentality, I kinda doubt they would suffer mass fatalities to predation

im just wondering if there is a reason behind believing that they will die off if released, aside from the fact that we have influenced their developemnt

Does it hurt the cows in the process because if it doesn't I see know reason to care

Learn English before posting again on Veeky Forums, please.

fun fact: this is called a fistula.