Rabbit Starvation

The place to talk about personal defense, preparedness, and survival; both armed and unarmed.
Greg
Posts: 8486
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 2:15 pm

Re: Rabbit Starvation

Post by Greg »

AlaskaTRX wrote:
Netpackrat wrote:
If only you knew how funny that was.... My brother HATES nuts... And raisins, if I want to keep him out of my cookies I just buy the ones with raisins in them. :lol:
you, sir, are evil...
You guys are funny. My wife does that raisin thing to me. (I can't eat raisins baked into anything, just can't. But I can eat them by themselves.)
Maybe we're just jaded, but your villainy is not particularly impressive. -Ennesby

If you know what you're doing, you're not learning anything. -Unknown
Sanity is the process by which you continually adjust your beliefs so they are predictively sound. -esr
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Windy Wilson
Posts: 4875
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 5:32 am

Re: Rabbit Starvation

Post by Windy Wilson »

My Grandfather kept rabbits and chickens when my mother was a child. Except for three rabbits kept as pets we never did. I even had a friend who had a chicken for a pet. I think that was supposed to teach him where chickens and eggs came from, but chickie became a pet, as did Snowball, Puff and Thumper. :roll: God only knows, nowadays even keeping the dirty beasts as pets is probably animal abuse. :evil:
308Mike wrote:I'd say if they wanted to institute a non-military conscription along with the military conscription (draft), I'd say, put them to work on America's farms!! Let them see, FIRST HAND what it takes to feed a nation, and parts of the rest of the world!! Let them see, feel, smell, and experience how all this stuff get to your dinner table BEFORE it hits the supermarket.

Oh, how I'd LOVE to implement such a program WITHOUT dhimmicrap oversight!! Just let them see how it's REALLY done down on the farm!!
That will never happen, the PETA people have infiltrated American culture too thoroughly.
I saw a promo for a program on I forget what channel about some (apparently high school aged) children who were taken to see how animals were turned into meat, and the promo depicts the children gagging and getting confrontational with people, including (I think) throwing someone through a glass door (dunno for sure, I didn't watch the promo but once). Aside from the issue of such over-the-top confrontational behavior being proper only for crimes against human beings, it seemed tremenously propagandisic, much as the experiment on bread mold using store-bought bread and home baked bread was deemed propagandistic by the natural foods people.
The use of the word "but" usually indicates that everything preceding it in a sentence is a lie.
E.g.:
"I believe in Freedom of Speech, but". . .
"I support the Second Amendment, but". . .
--Randy
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Darrell
Posts: 6586
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:12 pm

Re: Rabbit Starvation

Post by Darrell »

Heck, when we were little kids my twin brother and I found out that a slaughter house was a few miles south of where we lived. We rode our bikes there and asked for a tour, which the operators happily gave us. We saw some pretty gross stuff, but we thought it was cool as heck, we even brought home free samples--eyeballs, lungs, a brain, even an unborn baby calf! I put it in the freezer, still wrapped in butcher's paper, and forgot about it. Our mom found it months later while defrosting what she thought was some beef for dinner. She freaked when she found it, it was about the size of a small dog. That was a long time ago, I doubt they'd let kids in the door nowadays.
Eppur si muove--Galileo
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