I met a guy who likes furry and he has a girl dog, and I'm suspecting that he also likes bestiality, but I don't know how to talk about it.
For the furry comunity here, do ALL furries enjoy bestiality?
Furries are divided into opposite extremes on this. Many of the zoos and zooey allies that are fighting for acceptance are also furries, but on the other hand, there are others that can be outright nazis.
This divisiveness, within the furry fandom, goes back to the Turn of the Millennium, during a brief movement called the "Burned Furs." The Burned Furs were a movement within furry that wanted to abolish all adult content within the furry fandom, so they could make it all "family friendly" and socially acceptable. They were trying to push to ban all erotic or suggestive content on all furry media. However, this caused a gigantic backlash within the furry fandom, and many furries were so enraged that they went to the opposite extreme by publishing high volumes of extreme fetish porn, some of which pushed legal boundaries, and for a while, there was a prolonged political tug-of-war within the fandom. There was even one case where a furry convention was nearly destroyed because of a serious boycott over one of its organizers being a Burned Fur. If you had witnessed how toxic and hateful the Burned Furs were, you would understand why the boycott was so successful that it nearly ended the con altogether.
The anti-zoophile push, in the fandom, is really just the Burned Furs all over again, and it's because of this that a large number of pro-zoophile activists out there also identify as furry or quasi-furry: the fact that there is such a fanatical hate group within the furry fandom is highly disturbing to many of us. Our exposure to that has galvanized many of us into trying to do something to get our own message better organized.
To say "many zoophiles are also furry" is like saying "many black people live in the South."
Many black people do live in the South, but so does the Klan.
It is true that a large number of zoophiles are attracted to the furry fandom for the obvious reason that the furry fandom is based on an animal theme, but the furry fandom also harbors a toxic hate group. The roots of that hate group go back to the Turn of the Millennium, though. Their motives originated in their own anxiety over the judgment of society, and their reaction has escalated but also narrowed ever since. Zoophiles are the current scapegoat of choice.
Fortunately, some zooey leaders like Lykon have been quietly developing an allied community. You might run into him, eventually.
I am not saying that all furries are bad. The fandom attracts many wonderful, courageous, and forward-thinking people. Unfortunately, the very fact that the fandom is very open to all ideas means that it has also produced one of the world's most dangerous hate groups. When you are dealing with the furry fandom, the advice that "it depends on whom you are talking to" applies substantially more than usual.
While I believe that we zoophiles within the furry fandom will eventually be able to break the back of this hate group like others broke the backs of the Burned Furs before them, the furry fandom might always harbor the capacity for producing others like them. Even if they change their scapegoats, people like them will not stop existing. A strong push-back might shake up their self-justification in attacking one particular scapegoat, but the insecurity and fear that compels their behavior will not go away.