...fido is not a dog, does not resemble a dog in appearance, and has limited resemblances to a dog in behaviour. but. ...unfortunate news about fido is that. well. what the other person said
they show a child being choked almost to death and include several flashbacks to it, which is upsetting for various reasons, and some minor allusions are made to other child abuse, although that is the only explicit depiction.
it depends on whether this is intended for intimate-partner violence or general domestic violence, but while there is no violence between any two people in a romantic relationship shown, there are scenes where a character's brother is violent towards them.
outside of some of the Feldreẞ (the robot things) in the series bearing some resemblance to spiders, there is one singular shot where a spider is shown, but it is also an entirely still image and doesn't last longer than a few seconds.
I don't believe so, although I am somewhat less sensitive to this kind of thing, so I may have missed something. If there is, I believe it's probably decently minor.
while the Feldreẞ (robot things) are all insectoid robots, they are still not actually bugs; however, one of the later episodes does include several shots of ants swarming over the corpse of a dead butterfly.
while their actual ghostliness is questionable, multiple characters use the term "ghost" to describe something in the series, and one character specifically is haunted by either visions or thoughts of the dead, so in a sense I would say yes.
...they literally show a character being choked very near to death in a flashback. I have no idea why the other person voted "no" on this. the flashback plays several times.
Not shown on screen, but implied-one of the members of Spearhead, Anju Emma, has a series of scars carved across her back that read "Whore's daughter".
there are several shower/bath scenes-- all breasts and genitalia are covered, and while I personally feel these scenes are generally well-handled in terms of being narratively meaningful and avoiding sexualizing the characters, they are nonetheless present.
several suicides are referenced in some detail; a character makes references to suicide several times, although they are portrayed as explicitly not being suicidal; one character does commit suicide, and while the actual act is not shown, it does show her putting the gun to her chin.
sort of? it's fantasy racism and all that entails, but within that both groups use the word "pig" about each other, and they do use "colored" as a slur once or twice, both of which are pulled from hate speech about real groups, so.