Subject: *Gets out team pennants*
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Posted on: 2014-02-17 23:28:00 UTC

Okay, so I've been following the sporkings on Das-Sporking, and leaving the potential aspects borrowed from mormonism waaaay aside for someone who is more qualified than me...

The in-universe explanation does not actually make sense within the universe. Humans are omnivores, and pretty much obligate omnivores at that. (Humans can exist on a vegetarian diet if equivalent proteins found in plants are consumed, but cannot exist on a completely carnivorous diet.) Large carnivores should not be the "closest" match to human blood: bear might be somewhat similar, as they're partially omnivorous, but the most common omnivores and semi-omnivores in North America are, in roughly descending order of average size:

- pigs
- Badgers
- raccoons
- possums
- weasels, otters, ferrets
- Minks, martens, and sables
- rats and assorted related rodents

Now, if one were inclined to give SMeyer credit, you could argue that larger wildlife, such as grizzly bears, with a bodymass of two to four times that of a human, would be efficient hunting, as it would provide blood equivalent to multiple humans and keep a vampire satisfied for longer. This is canonically WRONG, since it is demonstrated time and time again that vampires do not have a set amount of blood that they are required to consume to be "full," nor do they seemingly have an ability to binge and digest like a reptile. Vampires can drink ten or fifteen people without getting full. They do not stop until they run out of convenient victims. Their appetite is literally bottomless, yet it is clear given how long the main characters can go without hunting that only a small amount of blood is sufficent: the vampires just want another human juice box.

Truly, Meyerpires are abominations of nature. Excuse me, I've got to go find the Winchesters, just thinking about this mess makes me yearn for these things to get salted and burned...

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