Following the outcry over the killing of the Monrovia bear "Blondie" by the Department of Fish and Wildlife, state legislators are considering a bill to require non-lethal solutions to human-wildlife conflicts, according to an article in the LA Times, here. The full text of the bill is here.
- Brad Haugaard
Well, pervsive government minders will have a new playpen, to evaluate if that bear/coyote/mountain lion/etc. that was biting and clawing you was properly treated...by you.
ReplyDeleteThis is insanity.
Next thing you know, these mensas will decide that where I lived in the Monrovia foothills was actually "stolen land" from indigenenous animals and the current owner have to cede it to them. And pay for the lot to be returned to the state it was in...pick a year. How does 1860 sound?
That's what the marxists are doing in Canada, ceding vast portions of Vancouver back to nomadic tribes who claim they lived there for bits of years, a century or two ago. No title to property now owned will survive this arrangement, eventually, but Carney and his mandarins in Ottawa...don't own property in the area. No trouble for them.
The analog of the Sacto mensas and Ottawa mandarins cannot be denied. Try to pull a similar stunt on a local George Soros (they never would, but if they did) and see what happens to them.
Fake narcisstic compassion. How modern.
Welcome to Monrovia Now, where the comments section is comprised of crackpots and conspiracy theorists (who don't even live here)
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