watervole: (Default)
Judith Proctor ([personal profile] watervole) wrote2004-11-28 11:38 am

Room 101 meme

Room 101-f
As lifted from <[info]>melston and <[info]>nisaba and <[info]>swisstone by [livejournal.com profile] dougs, where I saw it.

For those that haven't seen the UK TV show: Select just three things that the world (or just you)
would be better off without. Dump them into Room 101 and they will be eradicated. Your readers
must then try to persuade you that you're being unreasonable and that there might be unforeseen
consequences if your choices were allowed.

If you do this meme - increment the letter in the title so that 'Room 101-a' becomes 'Room 101-b', and
so on. Copy and paste the above text into your own journal.


People who believe their cats never catch birds

I love cats as individuals. As a species, I've come to really dislike them, or rather their owners. Cats, on average, kill 30 small mammals and birds per year. That's an enormous toll on wildlife, especially given the density of cats in the average housing estate.

Most owners (apart from those who have indoor cats) have a touching, but misplaced faith in their beloved moggies. Few bother with bells (which reduce kills by around 30% and almost none use sonic collars (which reduce kills by a further 10%)


Aviation fuel

There is an international agreement forbidding tax on aviation fuel. The net result is effectively an artificial subsidy for the least environmentally friendly form of transport.


TV Advertising

TV advertising drives much of our consumer culture. It encourages greed, lack of responsibility (ads for endless easy credit) and encourages people to spend money on 'food' with close to zero nutritional value. It substitutes the sound-bite for genuine information.
ext_15862: (Default)

[identity profile] watervole.livejournal.com 2004-11-28 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
All you can be sure of is that your cats don't bring home anything that they catch. Just becasue you don't see it, doesn't mean it isn't happening.

Isn't their fault - they're hunters by nature. They were kept to kill rats and mice until only a generation ago. HOw are they to know that the rules are changing.

[identity profile] vilakins.livejournal.com 2004-11-28 04:16 pm (UTC)(link)
They used to bring home birds and lizards in their first couple of years (mostly live and subsequently rescued), but haven't for years.

I'd like to see cat numbers controlled though, like dogs. Strays and ferals must have to kill or starve.