West Hills Snark

I just got a big beautiful 12 page paper mailer from West Hills Athletic Facility. It’s an athletic club that the University bought that nobody I know actually goes to because it’s too expensive. It’s like any other athletic club, looks good on the outside, smells awful on the inside, it’s overpriced and I’ve got no interest in it at all. It’s good to know they have cash to burn on these big mailers. What would be more convenient for everyone and save them lots of money is if they’d just ship out PDF files in email, save the paper costs, the printing costs, and enable me to place the from address into my junk mail list and have it sent to the great bit-bucket in the sky. A win for West Hills’ advertising budget and a win for me and everyone else who doesn’t want to have to find something like this in their campus mailbox just to immediately toss it in the recycling bin.

I suppose I could just clearly print on a sticky-note on our campus mailbox a list of all the spammy bits of debris that we elect to not get. That’s an idea! 😉

Bats In The Belfry

Maintenance Services has been doing some drilling in my office building and apparently upset a bat. My boss caught him in a box and moved him down to the basement where it’s dark and quiet, we’ve hope that he’ll find someplace to hang and sleep, and if we’re really lucky he’ll slip back into hibernation.

This of course is a hope of mine. It got me thinking about what people might do if they find out there is a resident bat in our building. What bothers me the most is when people immediately rush to “Lets Kill It” and spend exactly no time thinking about how we share this world with our animal companions, we don’t rule over it. I know this runs against what is written in several holy books, but I’ve never been one for those sorts of things, I respect my own instincts and my own beliefs than those “given to me” in some silly old book. I’m sure I differ in my opinions from a lot of people, whenever there is an animal caught after attacking a human the response is always the same, they kill the animal. It’s almost a reflex. This even happens when humans invade areas set aside for animals, like zoo enclosures. Nearly every year you hear a story about some inattentive parent who lost track of their child and the child scaled the enclosure to a bear exhibit and was mauled by the bear or killed. The response is almost always the same, “Kill the monster!” and this bothers me on a very fundamental level. I don’t do anything to hide the fact that I don’t think very highly of my own species and if one of us is stupid enough to invade an enclosure then mauling is the least they deserve. The animal doesn’t deserve to die for human stupidity.

Tied in with this, I received a message about how the US Congress was considering a bill to let the northern states conduct wolf culls and that really upset me. Haven’t we damaged enough of our world or do we need to do some more damage based on our greed and gluttony?

When it comes to animals, I really don’t see us as being any more worthy of survival than them. I see the world as belonging equally to every species, we just impose a will and think somehow we are more worthy than wolves or bears or birds. Based on population alone, the value of a single human being is 1 out of 6.8 billion. Compare that to say a wolf pack where there is 1 out of a thousand left and you can see which is worth more.

Next time you face an animal and there is a choice to be made, please select the humane trap-and-manage route and never ever the kill route. We share this world, we are not its dominators. Anyone who preaches that we are the master of this world should consider how easy it is for nature to kill us off in droves with storms and floods. We aren’t on top, the world is.

Stuff I Just Can't Throw Away

Spy Hill Landfill – 2

I can’t throw away plastic supermarket bags. My reluctance is because they are such a waste of difficult-to-degrade plastic if their only purpose is to sack up food for conveyance from a store. I believe deep down that if you are going to sack your food in plastic that once you get it home, those bags ought to have a second or third life in the home, a kind of active recycling. In my household plastic shopping bags are used to hold bottle and can recycling, used to contain too-old leftovers so they can be thrown in the garbage without their degradation becoming noticeable, and finally being handy receptacles for cat exhaust. If the bags just go right into the garbage from the market then their 10 minutes of use and 3000 year lingering feels like a horrible sin. If you can get them to do a host of other things, then I believe you should. People look at me oddly when I tell them to save the bags, some people just immediately throw them away, but I hope by answering this Plinky prompt, they understand why that isn’t right.

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