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Fat and Angry Cats


caldrail

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A couple of years ago, I watched a tv news report about some idiot in New York who kept wild animals in his apartment. Amongst the exotic beasts was a full grown tiger. Hard to believe, but there it was, on screen.

 

A policeman was lowered on ropes down the outside of the block to administer a tranquilizer dart through the window. Understandably, police were reluctant to enter the apartment with a live carnivorous cat in a hungry mood. The big cat charged at the window and scared the policeman witless, but it was darted and everything was happy ever after.

 

In this instance camera was too far away. You could see the head appear at the window. You could even see the open jaws, but so far away, it was lacking the excitement the hanging policeman must have felt.

 

Thing is, we all know how dangerous these cats are but we never see how dangerous they are. Sure, a wild-life program shows them strutting their stuff and taking down a herbivore effortlessly. It looks so bloodless and quick. I do remember one shot of a big cat tackling a warthog and discovering that not all herbivores are easily killed. In that incident, the cat was thrown into the air and decided a retreat was advisable.

 

Yesterday, on one of those awful 'amazing video' programs, I saw something about tigers I didn't expect. A tigeress and her cubs had escaped from a zoo, and local rangers were searching on the backs of elephants for the cat that had killed cattle in the area. Her cubs had already been caught, leaving the mother frustrated and angry. The Rangers saw it but the cat went to ground in long grass.

 

The elephant was spooked. It was unhappy about proceeding. Then the tiger appeared out of nowhere, coming out of the grass at a run, looking up at the rider and darting to the side to avoid the elephant. It was quickly in position for a leap at the rider who sat front of the cameraman. Almost right in front of the camera, it lifted twelve feet into the air to attack him. It dug its claws into the man's abdomen and bit his left hand severely before running off. Clearly it meant to pull the rider off the elephant and kill him.

 

The footage was stunning. This was a full on attack by an angry tigress and the sheer power of it was very impressive. Wonderful animals, an endangered species we really ought to protect, but one you treat with a great deal of respect.

 

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As for keeping wild animals as pets... I don't think anything beats the stupidity of people who keep chimpanzees as pets and try to raise them like children.

 

Only last week there was a horrific news story about a woman in Connecticut who had a 200-pound pet/"child" chimpanzee that attacked her friend and ripped the friend's face off and bit off her fingers. Attacking chimpanzees generally go for the face, fingers, and genitals -- and all chimpanzees become increasingly dangerous as they mature. The friend (a woman, but the cop who arrived thought it was a man because she was unrecognizable) is now in a hospital that has gained world renown for performing face transplants.

 

I dislike chimps, monkeys, etc., and have never been able to understand how anybody could think one of those animals looks "cute" or "funny" dressed up as a human.

 

-- Nephele

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Eh, I don't dislike them, I don't like them...but I do respect them, and all other non-human animals, as being great to look at and marvel. But even domesticated animals will turn if mistreated...it's their natural instinct.

 

A woman down the street has two pitbulls, the 'dad' and the 'daughter' of a litter. She insist that her dogs are loving, friendly, and the lot...and, honestly, Junior and Echo are. On the other hand, she's trained them not to fight and to behave. But give those dogs (or any others, for that matter) a different environment, and they will get aggressive and do harm. As much as I love Bella and know that she wouldn't really hurt me, I know that things could change given different circumstances.

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I dislike chimps, monkeys, etc., and have never been able to understand how anybody could think one of those animals looks "cute" or "funny" dressed up as a human.

 

-- Nephele

 

Its the human need to anthropomorphise everything. We give boats, cars, trains, and planes names and personalities (usually female I notice) and entertainment abounds in imagery of animals with human expressions, motives, and emotions. We know how to speak human - most of us are pretty lousy at speaking animal.

 

Chimps unfortunately are very endearing creatures when young but they do tend to get aggressive in their mature years. Coupled with an upper body strength that dwarfs our own typical human being, its something to be wary of. Personally I agree with you Neph - dressing animals in human clothes isn't as cute or funny as some people think, but then there's a lot of people who like to laugh at others especially when the object of their mirth isn't aware of it.

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Chimps unfortunately are very endearing creatures when young...

 

I don't really find chimps, monkeys, etc. endearing even when young. They're all shit-throwers.

 

-- Nephele

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Eh, I don't dislike them, I don't like them...but I do respect them, and all other non-human animals, as being great to look at and marvel. But even domesticated animals will turn if mistreated...it's their natural instinct..

 

It isn't just mistreatment that does that. Dogs are social animals like us. That means we tend to get along because dogs understand the human owner is the alpha pack member and co-operates... most of the time... Problems arise when the dog thinks it can dominate, or it misunderstands the signals its getting, or simply does what it always does but at an inappropriate moment.

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Also, dogs have been domesticated for thousands of years, whereas chimps will always be wild animals regardless of how they are treated by their owners.

 

Another thing about chimps... It's very likely that they naturally perceive human beings as rivals for the same resources. After all, humans and chimps evolved from a common ancestor, and there was a time in prehistory when there were several species of competing "ape-men" existing simultaneously -- Homo habilis, Homo rudolfensis, and Paranthropus boisei in the early Pleistocene period, for one example. Eventually, Homo sapiens won out in the evolutionary struggle, and at the expense of the most competitive species to ourselves.

 

While I myself don't perceive chimps as rivals for my resources (I've no worries about a chimp competing for my job), I think the bit of wildness that remains in me may be a contributing factor towards my dislike for the species.

 

And by the same token, I've no doubt that the honkin' huge chunk of wildness to be found in every chimp that any idiot ever put a diaper on and coddled and called "baby" (are you listening, Michael Jackson, you freak?) is responsible for pet chimpanzees' rage on their owners.

 

-- Nephele

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Also, dogs have been domesticated for thousands of years, whereas chimps will always be wild animals regardless of how they are treated by their owners.

Not necessarily. Humans and dogs got off to a good start because we had reason to co-operate in prehistory, plus humans have been breeding dogs and changing the species for thousands of years. We don't breed chimps the same way nor do we have any use for them except to sell teabags (re: Tetley's ads of the 70's) or as daiper consumers.

 

Another thing about chimps... It's very likely that they naturally perceive human beings as rivals for the same resources.

Well, they would, but so far chimps haven't shown much interest in supermarkets,burger vans, and indian resteraunts, so I suspect the competition isn't really a factor. Also, even in Africa, human beings moved out of the neighborhood to rear domestic animals and crops rather than the nuts and stuff chimps prefer.

 

While I myself don't perceive chimps as rivals for my resources (I've no worries about a chimp competing for my job), I think the bit of wildness that remains in me may be a contributing factor towards my dislike for the species.

I suspect the chimps don't have your fashion sense Neph. Maybe in the US you're lucky, but the the european anthropoids have certainly killed my job prospects :(

 

And by the same token, I've no doubt that the honkin' huge chunk of wildness to be found in every chimp that any idiot ever put a diaper on and coddled and called "baby" (are you listening, Michael Jackson, you freak?) is responsible for pet chimpanzees' rage on their owners.

:) Well, I think it has more to do with temperament. Chimps have been observed fighting border wars between groups and some of the violence they commit in the wild is truly shocking. Truth is, they ain't that different from us, and their nasty underside is something we'd prefer not to recognise.

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