Monday, October 15, 2018

Dog and Butterfly

up in the air he likes to fly



the Nature Conservancy and National Parks Service killed and/or harassed thousands of animals on the Channel Islands to save the fox..the Channel Island fox they call it....they celebrate and say that due to their efforts the fox is no longer endangered..they pat themselves on the back, the hitchless hounds


I've covered this issue before and am disgusted with these people..the whole debacle was a scam and a sham but the public just buried their heads in the sand and let it happen...


bionativism is a disease of the head...Hitler was a nativist


the Sierra Club used to be a respected environmental enterprise that produced a nice magazine and a newsletter, the Condor Call...I picked up a new version of the Condor Call in Santa Barbara and the Sierra Club has been overtaken by the enviro-zombies..just shills for the Parks Service and Nature Conservancy and the latest example is another propaganda piece-the success story about saving the fox



Channel Island Pigs were cool!

what these people won't tell you and never will is the fox is just a relative of the gray fox and the distinction is the Channel Island fox is heavily inbred...that's right, the Channel Islands are now overrun with a bunch of retarded little foxes...if we still had the Channel Island pigs we'd have a healthy population governed by golden eagles instead of college hippie biologists with distemper shots awaiting the foxes every three months


"inbred populations also often share mutations that are bad for health, shortening life spans or reducing the number of offspring. Dr. Wayne and his colleagues found that island foxes have many more harmful mutations than gray foxes on the mainland."


“They’re like dodos,” Dr. Wayne said in an interview. “They have no notion of human fear. You can just put them in your lap.”


Some scientists suspect that island foxes are fearless because of a long relationship with humans. Native Americans first settled the islands about 13,000 years ago, and they may have brought along gray foxes from the mainland. Previous studies indicate that island foxes share an ancestor with gray foxes that lived 9,200 years ago.


the point is the Channel  Island fox is not a viable species...


it's a dodohead

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