â„–3231718[Quote]
>The use of Axolotl Tanks raises significant ethical questions, particularly regarding the treatment of women who are transformed into these tanks. It is suggested that the tanks are essentially Tleilaxu females placed in a vegetative state, used as biological factories for reproduction. This revelation adds a layer of moral complexity to the Tleilaxu's practices and their impact on society within the Dune universe.
>It reduces human beings to tools, stripping away autonomy, consent, and dignity while normalizing extreme dehumanization. Sustaining it would require authoritarian control and secrecy, turning life into a commodified resource and concentrating power in the hands of those who exploit it.
<I couldn't help but notice that you only objected to putting them into stasis pods for breeding, but you never objected ever to them being turned axolotl human hybrids (axolotl athros)
>That's a fair catch-but the reason I didn't single it out is because the transformation itself isn't inherently wrong in the same way.
>In other words, turning someone into an anthro hybrid without consent would already be a serious violation, but in the Dune context it's just one step in a larger system that completely erases their personhood.
â„–3231725[Quote]
zoophile experiment
â„–3231839[Quote]
>>3231743cucknonymous sage go back
â„–3231871[Quote]
>>3231839go back to where?
â„–3231873[Quote]
save us dave
â„–3231886[Quote]
why not we just create a variant of women that does not have a head and just serve as incubators for male offspring instead of this zoophile shit?
â„–3231895[Quote]
>>3231886because I misinterpreted what axolotl meant in the doom example and it gave me the idea of axoltl human hybrids as a way to make it more humiliating
â„–3231898[Quote]
meds