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01-30-2013
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#76
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Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheCount
You're right. If only all mothers had Casey Anthony's mothering instincts instead, they'd live longer.
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She's doing her young no good at all by dying...cause now they most likely will die...which is what she was trying to avoid by doing what she did.
She was dumb for they way she went about attacking the cat...not for trying to defend her young.
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01-30-2013
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#77
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Pixel Pusher
Joined: | Aug 2007 |
Location: | New York, NY |
Posts: | 19,598 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ConcordCowboy
She's doing her young no good at all by dying...cause now they most likely will die...which is what she was trying to avoid by doing what she did.
She was dumb for they way she went about attacking the cat...not for trying to defend her young.
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Well first of all, she's a bird, so OBVIOUSLY she's dumb.
That being said, I doubt she's run into many natural predators with the reflexes of a house cat, which is not a natural predator.
Another good example of why they should be kept inside. 
We need wins, and that's all we need. I don't give a damn about anyone on this roster over wins. I'd trade Ware, Lee and Dez if it meant more wins.
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01-30-2013
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#78
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Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheCount
Well first of all, she's a bird, so OBVIOUSLY she's dumb.
That being said, I doubt she's run into many natural predators with the reflexes of a house cat, which is not a natural predator.
Another good example of why they should be kept inside. 
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I've seen plenty of smart birds.
I see them in my back yard giving crap to Dexter all the time.
The dumb ones are the ones who give him crap...then let their guard down and think he's going to forget about it. 
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01-30-2013
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#79
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Senior Member
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Posts: | 18,307 |
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They're bird brains!
****
"The restructures are built in. Everybody’s making a big to do about this. I don’t know why."- Stephen Jones
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01-31-2013
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#80
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Maple Leaf
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Posts: | 3,631 |
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I would be careful...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hopeuhavechange
forgive one hand typing- are you suggesting the article is mostly/completely a fabrication? Why? I've seen unrelated studies suggest similar numbers for some time. A conspiracy afoot? Who is behind this campaign of propaganda?
I have seen what i believe to be healthy birds taken by cats and deposited around, usually on a porch, most frequently Mourning Doves who lack astute awareness of many other birds; also Robins protecting their brood. I know this fr observation. As for the Toxo disease rt I will have to look into it. I suspect much of that goes undetected or unreported.
[View Full Quote]Are you advocating for nonnative (but i repeat myself) feral cats..is that a good thing? And house cats should be left to take wild animals for sport and tossed aside when the become bored with the corpse? Oh, it's not really a problem in your view, or is exaggerated i gather. And there are drops in population certain birds which may not be wholly due to cats but they are a factor. Why not eliminate it? Not the cats but free ranging domestics and feral populations? Doesn't seem all that radical to me.
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...about targeting feral cat populations given how much they actually help keep pest populations down in rural and abandoned areas.
Also the reduction of animal populations due to cats is no where near the proportion or tragedy that humans have.
If you want to watch actual horrific scenes of senseless avian death look no further than the disease culling wildlife mgmt has to do because of disease caused by congested numbers of birds in smaller restricted habitat forced by human encroachment.
Cats are a very small part of avian death equation and definitely one of the smaller problems in our society.
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01-31-2013
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#81
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Senior Member
Joined: | Sep 2011 |
Posts: | 145 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by davidyee
...about targeting feral cat populations given how much they actually help keep pest populations down in rural and abandoned areas.
Also the reduction of animal populations due to cats is no where near the proportion or tragedy that humans have.
If you want to watch actual horrific scenes of senseless avian death look no further than the disease culling wildlife mgmt has to do because of disease caused by congested numbers of birds in smaller restricted habitat forced by human encroachment.
Cats are a very small part of avian death equation and definitely one of the smaller problems in our society.
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True. I well recognize the human toll on birds (and wildlife in general) thru expansion as well our structures well enough, but that's unstoppable. (Oh we can better design our towers, i think, a little smarter to minimize some collisions and surely safeguard windmills more intelligently)
I wouldn't go quite go so far as Sir David Attenborrough recently offered and call humans a "plague"...but on balance this scale is proportionally a larger issue on scale than the cat predation. But what is likely to be done about that? Nothing! We both know not only that but that the trend will only deteriorate.
But we can own responsibility for our cats. Not too much to expect, imo. And who wants large colonies of feral cats in urban areas? Not very many, that's why society rounds them up and destroys them immediately or allows them a few days and does the same for the unclaimed. This is not good.
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01-31-2013
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#82
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Senior Member
Joined: | Jan 2005 |
Posts: | 6,132 |
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01-31-2013
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#83
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Mr. Buckeye
Years Donated 2004, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Apr 2004 |
Location: | Buckeye Nation |
Posts: | 12,746 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ethiostar
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I've seen that before and it's hilarious.
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01-31-2013
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#84
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Senior Member
Joined: | May 2009 |
Location: | Weatherford,Texa |
Posts: | 502 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ConcordCowboy
I've seen plenty of smart birds.
I see them in my back yard giving crap to Dexter all the time.
The dumb ones are the ones who give him crap...then let their guard down and think he's going to forget about it. 
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I wanted to say the same thing, just did not want to type it out, thanks. 
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01-31-2013
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#85
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I'm Complicated
Years Donated 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Joined: | Oct 2005 |
Location: | Chesterfield, VA |
Posts: | 5,137 |
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https://www.alleycat.org/alley-cat-a...cats-and-birds
BETHESDA, MD— Alley Cat Allies, the only national advocacy organization dedicated to the protection and humane treatment of cats, responded to a biased study on cats and wildlife published in the journal Nature, which it called a veiled promotion by bird advocates to ramp up the mass killing of outdoor cats.
“This study is part of a continuing propaganda campaign to vilify cats,” said Becky Robinson, president and co-founder of Alley Cat Allies. “It seems as if the authors landed on a conclusion first and then cherry-picked through studies to support it. Some of the research they cite is more than a half-century old. They even cite discredited researcher Nico Dauphine, who was convicted by a D.C. jury for trying to poison cats and then fired from her job at the Smithsonian. The researcher convicted of trying to poison cats worked for Marra, one of the authors of this study.”
“This so called ‘survey of research’ seems just another misguided attempt to draw attention to the decline of wildlife by manufacturing a fake debate. The study conveniently sidestepped the primary culprit of decline of wildlife populations which, of course, is human activity including habitat destruction.
“The authors also neglect to mention that their proposed ‘solution’ really endorses continuing the same failed policies of the last century which call for the mass killing of cats. Tens of millions of healthy cats have already been killed in animal pounds and shelters, at great taxpayer expense, without achieving anything. A policy of just more killing can never be the right answer,” she said.
Robinson noted that Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) does work to end reproduction and to stabilize the population of feral cats, and that is why every year a growing number of communities turn to TNR as an innovative, compassionate and common-sense approach.
“Because of the success of TNR—which stabilizes and then reduces the population—places where there were once large colonies of feral cats have seen those colonies fade away. There is good reason for cities to change from ‘catch and kill’ to ‘neuter and return.’
“The threats to birds and wildlife with real impact—pollution and habitat fragmentation and destruction—are the ones without ‘easy’ answers,” said Robinson. “Americans should not be fooled by sensational headlines and bad science. Killing cats will not save species of birds or mammals.”
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01-31-2013
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#86
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Senior Member
Joined: | Sep 2011 |
Posts: | 145 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Faerluna
https://www.alleycat.org/alley-cat-a...cats-and-birds
BETHESDA, MD— Alley Cat Allies, the only national advocacy organization dedicated to the protection and humane treatment of cats, responded to a biased study on cats and wildlife published in the journal Nature, which it called a veiled promotion by bird advocates to ramp up the mass killing of outdoor cats.
[View Full Quote] “This study is part of a continuing propaganda campaign to vilify cats,” said Becky Robinson, president and co-founder of Alley Cat Allies. “It seems as if the authors landed on a conclusion first and then cherry-picked through studies to support it. Some of the research they cite is more than a half-century old. They even cite discredited researcher Nico Dauphine, who was convicted by a D.C. jury for trying to poison cats and then fired from her job at the Smithsonian. The researcher convicted of trying to poison cats worked for Marra, one of the authors of this study.”
“This so called ‘survey of research’ seems just another misguided attempt to draw attention to the decline of wildlife by manufacturing a fake debate. The study conveniently sidestepped the primary culprit of decline of wildlife populations which, of course, is human activity including habitat destruction.
“The authors also neglect to mention that their proposed ‘solution’ really endorses continuing the same failed policies of the last century which call for the mass killing of cats. Tens of millions of healthy cats have already been killed in animal pounds and shelters, at great taxpayer expense, without achieving anything. A policy of just more killing can never be the right answer,” she said.
Robinson noted that Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) does work to end reproduction and to stabilize the population of feral cats, and that is why every year a growing number of communities turn to TNR as an innovative, compassionate and common-sense approach.
“Because of the success of TNR—which stabilizes and then reduces the population—places where there were once large colonies of feral cats have seen those colonies fade away. There is good reason for cities to change from ‘catch and kill’ to ‘neuter and return.’
“The threats to birds and wildlife with real impact—pollution and habitat fragmentation and destruction—are the ones without ‘easy’ answers,” said Robinson. “Americans should not be fooled by sensational headlines and bad science. Killing cats will not save species of birds or mammals.”
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Faerluna
https://www.alleycat.org/alley-cat-a...cats-and-birds
BETHESDA, MD— Alley Cat Allies, the only national advocacy organization dedicated to the protection and humane treatment of cats, responded to a biased study on cats and wildlife published in the journal Nature, which it called a veiled promotion by bird advocates to ramp up the mass killing of outdoor cats.
[View Full Quote] “This study is part of a continuing propaganda campaign to vilify cats,” said Becky Robinson, president and co-founder of Alley Cat Allies. “It seems as if the authors landed on a conclusion first and then cherry-picked through studies to support it. Some of the research they cite is more than a half-century old. They even cite discredited researcher Nico Dauphine, who was convicted by a D.C. jury for trying to poison cats and then fired from her job at the Smithsonian. The researcher convicted of trying to poison cats worked for Marra, one of the authors of this study.”
“This so called ‘survey of research’ seems just another misguided attempt to draw attention to the decline of wildlife by manufacturing a fake debate. The study conveniently sidestepped the primary culprit of decline of wildlife populations which, of course, is human activity including habitat destruction.
“The authors also neglect to mention that their proposed ‘solution’ really endorses continuing the same failed policies of the last century which call for the mass killing of cats. Tens of millions of healthy cats have already been killed in animal pounds and shelters, at great taxpayer expense, without achieving anything. A policy of just more killing can never be the right answer,” she said.
Robinson noted that Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) does work to end reproduction and to stabilize the population of feral cats, and that is why every year a growing number of communities turn to TNR as an innovative, compassionate and common-sense approach.
“Because of the success of TNR—which stabilizes and then reduces the population—places where there were once large colonies of feral cats have seen those colonies fade away. There is good reason for cities to change from ‘catch and kill’ to ‘neuter and return.’
“The threats to birds and wildlife with real impact—pollution and habitat fragmentation and destruction—are the ones without ‘easy’ answers,” said Robinson. “Americans should not be fooled by sensational headlines and bad science. Killing cats will not save species of birds or mammals.”
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Any cat lobby can construct an argument/study impugning this study's motives which appear to discredit it. It's expected. However, nowhere does the study say cat predation is a panacea for preserving wildlife...doesn't seem to suggest it. It only highlights its particular impact. Numbers, we know, can be manipulated in either direction. The purpose here was to emphasize the cat's contribution to the larger problem. I agree that a comprehensive approach to the conservation of wildlife--esp birdlife- should have been included to demonstrate the scope of the problem. But as I mentioned earlier, does anyone here believe human encroachment will be halted? I don't. Does that mean we should wash our hands of any attempts to mitigate wildlife destruction wherever we can? And maybe tackle more serious threats in the distant future as attitudes change? I can't see the logic or compassion in not doing so.
"Killing cats will not save species of birds or mammals.”
Loved this strawman. Amusing, but discredits the piece. Should have prefaced it with "some say"... or "this notion..."
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01-31-2013
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#87
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Senior Member
Joined: | Sep 2011 |
Posts: | 145 |
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And another thing, this is my final final final word. As for our not seeing the landscape littered with dead birds- birds decompose inordinately snappily! I know this from direct observation time and again. We can happen along a dead bird one day and right quick we find nothing but a few feathers scattered about. And we must also account for prolific scavengers who do their thing if they act fast enuff. But let's leave Redskins fans out of this.
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01-31-2013
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#88
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Senior Member
Joined: | Oct 2012 |
Location: | Lewisville |
Posts: | 516 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by davidyee
...Cats are a very small part of avian death equation and definitely one of the smaller problems in our society.
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Ultimately it's what we humans do: deforesting the world to the point that in a century when we hear Dorothy exclaim: "Lions, Tigers, and Bears!" only bears might exist in the wild...hundred if not thousands of species will be extinct in the wild.
The stray dog and feral cat problem is a few people refusing to take responsibility to neuter their pets - if they did, your local PetsMart and Petco would not be crowded on Saturdays with volunteers giving their time to find homes for homeless pets.
Hate on cats if you find it to be therapeutic, but the truth is people are responsible for invasive species and upsetting Nature's balance
...with "The Little FurBall of HATE" shreding a sports editorial (see avatar)
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02-01-2013
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#89
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A Plastic Container
Joined: | Aug 2010 |
Posts: | 7,017 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BringBackThatOleTimeBoys
Ultimately it's what we humans do: deforesting the world to the point that in a century when we hear Dorothy exclaim: "Lions, Tigers, and Bears!" only bears might exist in the wild...hundred if not thousands of species will be extinct in the wild.
The stray dog and feral cat problem is a few people refusing to take responsibility to neuter their pets - if they did, your local PetsMart and Petco would not be crowded on Saturdays with volunteers giving their time to find homes for homeless pets.
Hate on cats if you find it to be therapeutic, but the truth is people are responsible for invasive species and upsetting Nature's balance
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Neutering animals isn't natures way of balancing anything.
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02-01-2013
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#90
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Senior Member
Joined: | Oct 2012 |
Location: | Lewisville |
Posts: | 516 |
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^ neutering is not part of nature, but it's an adjustment for what we have done to alter it and the most humane way to make corrections for the damage we have done.
...with "The Little FurBall of HATE" shreding a sports editorial (see avatar)
Last edited by BringBackThatOleTimeBoys : 02-01-2013 at 08:12 AM.
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