That’s awfully sweet. There are so many atrocious images of the military out there – sometimes it’s hard to remember that some of them like kittens, too.
That’s awfully sweet. There are so many atrocious images of the military out there – sometimes it’s hard to remember that some of them like kittens, too.
There was an article in the New York Times a few weeks ago about the cats of Baghdad:
“The bloodiest suicide bombings, even miles away, have the sound and feel of the apocalypse, causing humans to freeze, no matter how often they experience it. Cats need to hear it only once. As they skitter to the safety of trees and bushes, they enter the blast and the tremor on the hard drive of their brains. On the next occasion, come the blast, they barely stir.”
There was an article in the New York Times a few weeks ago about the cats of Baghdad:
“The bloodiest suicide bombings, even miles away, have the sound and feel of the apocalypse, causing humans to freeze, no matter how often they experience it. Cats need to hear it only once. As they skitter to the safety of trees and bushes, they enter the blast and the tremor on the hard drive of their brains. On the next occasion, come the blast, they barely stir.”
That’s awfully sweet. There are so many atrocious images of the military out there – sometimes it’s hard to remember that some of them like kittens, too.
Or that most of them are just kids. Scared kids.
That’s awfully sweet. There are so many atrocious images of the military out there – sometimes it’s hard to remember that some of them like kittens, too.
I say it’s a bomb in disguise.
A purrr bomb!
I say it’s a bomb in disguise.
A purrr bomb!
Or that most of them are just kids. Scared kids.
There was an article in the New York Times a few weeks ago about the cats of Baghdad:
“The bloodiest suicide bombings, even miles away, have the sound and feel of the apocalypse, causing humans to freeze, no matter how often they experience it. Cats need to hear it only once. As they skitter to the safety of trees and bushes, they enter the blast and the tremor on the hard drive of their brains. On the next occasion, come the blast, they barely stir.”
that article made me all teary eyed…
though i wondered… why are my cats still afraid of the vacuum even though it has never hurt them?
There was an article in the New York Times a few weeks ago about the cats of Baghdad:
“The bloodiest suicide bombings, even miles away, have the sound and feel of the apocalypse, causing humans to freeze, no matter how often they experience it. Cats need to hear it only once. As they skitter to the safety of trees and bushes, they enter the blast and the tremor on the hard drive of their brains. On the next occasion, come the blast, they barely stir.”
that article made me all teary eyed…
though i wondered… why are my cats still afraid of the vacuum even though it has never hurt them?
That is just amazing.
That is just amazing.
God(dess) ((somebody, please!)) Bless.
God(dess) ((somebody, please!)) Bless.
Yeah. Bollucks. A perfect statement of how we can be so humane to animals and so inhumane to ourselves.
Negativity aside, like your journal! Mind if I friend you? 🙂
Not at all…welcome aboard!
Yeah. Bollucks. A perfect statement of how we can be so humane to animals and so inhumane to ourselves.
Negativity aside, like your journal! Mind if I friend you? 🙂
Not at all…welcome aboard!