Emba
Jarjar Sphinx
★★★★★
- Joined
- May 19, 2019
- Posts
- 58,336
Mouse utopia, revisited.
I did this: "Since not all mice can be alpha males, the losers withdrew." You think I would choose to spend 2~3 decades in a goddamned motherfucking TENT, if I was loved?
"...prematurely rejected, first by their fathers, then by their mothers, and then by established groups in the community, the young grew up without knowing how to behave, personally or socially as mice..." - Tragedy in Mouse Utopia, Dr.J.R Vallentine
According to this article \/,
The same stuff is happening to us!
Got a single mom? (Who doesn't?)
"...mothers fell short of maternal expectations". In recent years there have been an increasing amount of cases [1], [2], [3], [4] of child neglect and abuse by human mothers that have made it to national headlines. It is not hard to speculate that there are many more we have not heard. In Australia, police have released data that attribute half of the nation's infanticides to their mothers."
&
"We know that women in developed nations are suppressing maternal instincts, either intrinsically or extrinsically. It is also becoming more common for women to seek a sex-fueled lifestyle, something that was also observed in the mouse utopia."
And even empty rural areas have a place in mouse utopia!
Ofc, some of their arguments are off a bit, but the general ideas are sound.
Basically, life is too easy for humanity.
In order to counteract the doomer effects of mouse utopia, HERE, \/,
...offers a different perspective. The comments bring it right back to mouse utopia though...
It's unlikely that people will live with responsibility towards the earth. Proper gardening etc... Lowered plastic use... Sensible relationships...
Oh well. Whatever. Yawn. Time to eat something...
Have a mice day!
I did this: "Since not all mice can be alpha males, the losers withdrew." You think I would choose to spend 2~3 decades in a goddamned motherfucking TENT, if I was loved?
"...prematurely rejected, first by their fathers, then by their mothers, and then by established groups in the community, the young grew up without knowing how to behave, personally or socially as mice..." - Tragedy in Mouse Utopia, Dr.J.R Vallentine
According to this article \/,
What humans can learn from the mice utopia experiment
In 1950, an American ethologist named John Calhoun created a series of experiments to test the effects of overpopulation on the behaviour of social animals. The animals which Calhoun chose for his experiments where mice (and later on rats). He...
www.sott.net
The same stuff is happening to us!
Got a single mom? (Who doesn't?)
"...mothers fell short of maternal expectations". In recent years there have been an increasing amount of cases [1], [2], [3], [4] of child neglect and abuse by human mothers that have made it to national headlines. It is not hard to speculate that there are many more we have not heard. In Australia, police have released data that attribute half of the nation's infanticides to their mothers."
&
"We know that women in developed nations are suppressing maternal instincts, either intrinsically or extrinsically. It is also becoming more common for women to seek a sex-fueled lifestyle, something that was also observed in the mouse utopia."
And even empty rural areas have a place in mouse utopia!
Ofc, some of their arguments are off a bit, but the general ideas are sound.
Basically, life is too easy for humanity.
In order to counteract the doomer effects of mouse utopia, HERE, \/,
The myth of overpopulation
In his latest, "Mouse Utopia and the Blackest Pill", James Corbett takes aim at perhaps the most insidious propaganda narrative of all, and one that is very close to my heart: Overpopulation. This has been a personal bugbear of mine since I grew...
www.sott.net
It's unlikely that people will live with responsibility towards the earth. Proper gardening etc... Lowered plastic use... Sensible relationships...
Oh well. Whatever. Yawn. Time to eat something...
Have a mice day!