One person rather hopefully mentioned urban gardening, and another said "well, who's going to do it? I can't picture EBT recipients getting their hands dirty."
Fuck* you. When society collapses and we all have to resort to cannibalism, you are going right to the top of the list, buddy.
(Is it wrong that I keep a list just in case society collapses and we all have to resort to cannibalism? I like to be prepared, that's all!)
* autocorrect made this FCC you. LOL!
Fuck* you. When society collapses and we all have to resort to cannibalism, you are going right to the top of the list, buddy.
(Is it wrong that I keep a list just in case society collapses and we all have to resort to cannibalism? I like to be prepared, that's all!)
* autocorrect made this FCC you. LOL!
no subject
Date: 2013-10-11 04:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-10-11 11:59 am (UTC)What if it isn't exactly the end, we're all just stranded in a lifeboat or up in the Andes or something, can we all at least agree to eat them first?
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Date: 2013-10-12 01:43 am (UTC)If you're stranded in a lifeboat in this era, you're not going to be stranded in it long enough to starve to death, because technology, right? If the wind and sea are going to kill you, they'll kill you; if they don't, the Coast Guard will find you before you have time to even die of thirst. Things tend to go badly for those who turn cannibal right before the rescuers arrive, like Gorging Jack and Guzzling Jimmy (http://www.poetry-archive.com/t/little_billee.html) - however, you might very well have time to accidentally push certain people out of the boat, and to accidentally hit them in the head with an oar while trying valiantly but unsuccessfully to rescue them.
Up in the Andes? I'm betting technology can find you up there pretty quick these days too, especially if you've got fire (and if you don't, you'll surely freeze before you starve.) Planes have radios and GPS transmitters and automatic distress signals and all kinds of cool stuff, so again, your best course of action would be to accidentally push the unnecessary members of the party over a convenient cliff before the Search and Rescue helicopter shows up.
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Date: 2013-10-12 01:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-10-12 03:07 am (UTC)After all, I'm probably at the top of more than one 'Little List' myself. }-
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Date: 2013-10-12 03:41 am (UTC)I've never been a big fan of dogs, though. Maybe my luck with cats can extend to really big cats...? (Now THAT is wishful thinking! Though, one thing Emergence got right that I don't see in many other dystopias is the existence of megafauna all over North America. As the genius protagonist (and, thus, author) realizes, zookeepers don't get into it for the easy money. In the event of a world-ending killer plague, more than a few of them can be reasonably expected to release the animals rather than let them starve to death caged up. You ever read that book?)
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Date: 2013-10-12 05:27 am (UTC)There might be some megafauna. For sure, many of the zookeepers would release their dear beasties, but most of the poor critters would not survive long, especially in places with harsh winters. The wolves and bears and some of the big cats might do all right. Cheetahs are said to be the most trainable, but they come from a hot, dry land, and would probably not adapt very well to cold rain and snow. Siberian tigers would be awesome and weatherproof, but it'd take a lot of long pig to keep one fed, and perhaps after all, one wouldn't feel quite comfortable with a tiger who'd acquired a taste for long pig.
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Date: 2013-10-12 04:32 pm (UTC)"Cheetahs are said to be the most trainable, but they come from a hot, dry land, and would probably not adapt very well to cold rain and snow."
Well, so do my pet cats, and yet cats are one of the most wildly successful invasive species across the planet.
Though that might fade once humans all die off in a cataclysmic event. Perhaps only those in desert areas would survive very long as a feral, then wild species. They're still very closely related to their next closest relative, aren't they?
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Date: 2013-10-12 06:30 pm (UTC)There's a LOT of differences between cheetahs and domestic cats. Cheetahs went through a serious evolutionary bottleneck of their own; they're not genetically adaptable like the domestic cat - which didn't spread around the world on its own anyway, but was deliberately carried around by humans. The domestic cat is extremely prolific, too; left unspayed, a female cat has an average of twelve kittens a year. A female cheetah has an average of 3-5 cubs every two years.
Domestic cats are closely enough related to several wild species to interbreed with them. Supposedly the Maine coon cat is descended from a cross between Norwegian forest cats brought by the Vikings, and the local wildcats. Both Maine coon cats and Norwegian forest cats are well-adapted to snowy climes, having had plenty of time to evolve for them. The cheetahs have had no time, and I don't think they're closely-related enough to any other feline to interbreed with them.
I think the cats would do better if the humans all died off in the cataclysmic event than they would if the humans were still around and hunting. The surviving dogs would be a problem for them either way, of course - maybe less if the humans were hunting the dogs, which they naturally would do: wild dogs are dangerous, but they're also good eating; more meat and easier to hunt than cats. Eventually, a balance of nature would be achieved: I suspect the canids would be the peak predators, but they don't climb, so the cats could manage to stay out of their way.
We've got cougars here, and they can be a problem in some areas - they might be more of one if there were fewer humans, or then again they might get hunted out if there were enough humans left with guns and no gun-laws. Cougars can be tamed, but they can't be domesticated even as much as a cheetah can be, so I don't know if it would be possible to train one to hunt cooperatively or share its kills. Ocelots, servals and margays can be tamed too, but it's my understanding that leopards cannot be - that no matter how carefully they're hand-reared, they'll still leop on a tasty monkey any chance they get. I see no reason why the snow leopard couldn't adapt to the mountains of this continent once it got there, but it'd be a long, highly perilous journey that few or none would survive. As far as I know, the other leopard species are all warm-climate critters.
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Date: 2013-10-12 06:48 pm (UTC)Given that zoos and humans naturally coexist, and humans don't generally coexist with other large wild animals, is territory finding so important? The zoo animals would be moving into (and dying in, many of them, but lets talk about the survivors) territory that was formerly human-controlled and perforce devoid of most other wildlife.
So there absolutely is a niche to fill that can't all be filled with the remaining native wildlife, and relatively open territory as well.
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Date: 2013-10-12 08:37 pm (UTC)We're also living with cougars (http://wdfw.wa.gov/living/cougars.html), which do occasionally kill people, but which are primarily dog-hunters: they like to lurk on porch roofs and drop on the dog as it comes outside. Where I lived when my daughter was small, we had the bear coming through the yard - with her cub, once - to get the fish guts old Herman didn't dump far enough away from the house. An old friend of my housemate's was killed by a mountain goat just a couple years ago, not too far from here.. The barred owls are aggressive to humans, and the Great Horned can be aggressive too; they'll swoop silently out of the dark and strike your head like it was a squirrel. And then there are the damn raccoons: don't even get me started about them. They're not that large maybe, but they're fearless, smart, and extremely aggressive; they'll kill cats and small dogs if they can, and lay utter waste to a hen-house.
The thing about territory: yes, it's not just important, but essential - it's a part of the animal's body-map; all the scents, sounds and feelings of the known turf, and everything else that lives in it, hunter or hunted. Even migratory animals don't migrate at random; they follow a more-or-less known course. Take a beastie out of its territory, and it's lost - it doesn't know where to find food or safety; can't compete with hunters who know the terrain and the habits of the local prey; doesn't know when or how it may be attacked.
There's going to be a lot of competition out there for hunting territory. Once the humans receded, the coyotes and cougars would move in; the big dogs would form feral packs; the zoo-bred predators mostly couldn't compete with them in hunting, nor make it across their hunting-grounds unchallenged. 'Home turf advantage': the animal defending its territory usually wins against an interloper. If it were wild cougar vs. zoo cheetah, I'd bet on the cougar.
I don't know how a zoo snow-leopard would do against one of our mountain goats, either; they are fierce and wicked. I know wild snow leopards eat them, but wild snow leopards had their mamas to teach them how. Cheetahs are plains cats; if they were to make a stand anywhere, it'd be the prairies, where the deer and the antelope play. Unfortunately, all that land already belongs to the wolves.
The tigers might well reign supreme. There are a lot of zoo tigers, and tigers naturally travel a long way to find their mates; the Siberian tiger could range far up into Canada, and give the grizzlies, moose and wolverines something to think about for a change. The Bengal tigers and South American leopards would be a serious menace if they got well-established in the South, especially if monkeys and chimps were regular items on their menus: doubtless all primates taste much the same. ^-^.
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Date: 2013-10-12 06:51 pm (UTC)They're good hunters, to be sure, but they aren't exactly apex predators.
There's another problem with cheetahs, and that's that other cat species don't like them. Don't lions go out of their way to hunt down cheetah cubs and kill them?
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Date: 2013-10-12 09:02 pm (UTC)I don't think the lions would have a snowflake's chance of getting established here; they seem to be really terrain-and-territory specific, dependent on large herds of migratory ungulants. We haven't got any of those; we only have limited buffalo and antelope, and they favor deep-snow country.
I think the dogs and wolves would do for the cheetahs. Cheetahs aren't the best of climbers, and they're only fast in the sprint; they couldn't outrun a pack.
Tigers could tip the balance, though. If tigers got well-established, they'd be hunting the canines, and their preferred terrain might not overlap all that much with the cheetah's preferred terrain. The tigers would probably eat a kitty if it was convenient, but not deliberately hunt cats for food, so if they kept the dogs thinned out, the kittehs might actually have a chance.
They would miss us, though. A lot. 8~{