Using it for 4 years, both at home and at work (also have Raspberry Pi 4 under Arch Linux ARM).
I'm a bit perplexed why it is considered less stable than "your typical Linux distro". Never used Debian, but I used Ubuntu with KDE prior to Arch. It was very common to have problems, from constant messages about crashing staff (AppArmor hitting the record) to reinstalling the entire OS. During 4 years with Arch I had only a few tiny issues that required 5-10 minutes to fix (not least thanks to Arch Wiki).
Not sure though if this is because Arch is so nice by itself, or because with Arch I moved to more minimalist setups (which Arch endorses so naturally).
Haven't watched much of anime, and haven't watched any for more than a decade. But back then I had huge impression from Azumanga Daioh. Nothing special in plot, just a year in the life of a few schoolgirls. But such lively and unique personages, I remember I had lump in the throat when I watched the last episode, as if I was saying farewell to close friends that I will not ever see again.
There is no arguing here against eating stuff that has meat-like properties (nutritional content and perhaps even taste). The issue is whether we have to torture billions of mammals and birds for that. I don't think it matters for your instinct if the stuff you eat comes from a killed animal or not, as long as it tastes and supplies the same.
Lions, sharks and birds, even if they have consciousness, do not have intelligence. They cannot choose whether to cause harm/pain/death to anyone or not. Humans do have that capability, and to get food could have figured out something better than imprisoning other animals in boxes all their lives.