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Old 12-11-11, 11:43 AM   #1
Kongo Otto
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It's not uncommon in the animal world actually. Even if we don't include insects
Chimpanzees do that also, its as you said not uncommon.
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Old 12-11-11, 12:55 PM   #2
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Chimpanzees do that also, its as you said not uncommon.


I once saw one of those farm cats, that used to dwel in our barn, eat her young. But couldn't quite understand why, food is usually abundant (mice, scraps, leftover dog food)
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Old 12-11-11, 01:28 PM   #3
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I once saw one of those farm cats, that used to dwel in our barn, eat her young. But couldn't quite understand why, food is usually abundant (mice, scraps, leftover dog food)
Black bears, the female will not ovulate unless there is enough of it's preferred diet in its system in the late summer. How is that relevant? Animals are a lot smarter than we give them credit for.
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Old 12-11-11, 02:55 PM   #4
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Pic is from the film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's The Road. A tough, but excellent read.
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Old 12-11-11, 06:34 PM   #5
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Just finished that last week, it was a gift for my mum last year, but she hasn't got around to reading it yet.
Aside from the detail in the printed word that is often lost in film adaptations, I thought it was reasonably faithful to the book.
It piqued my curiosity as to 'what the disaster was' that put an end to civilisation as we know it, the lack of a definite answer to this was something that added to the whole out of time feeling the book had, the isolation and detachment from what was before.

On the harshness scale of disaster/fall of mankind stories it was a little bit behind Lucifers Hammer in it's scale but had a more intimate character for all of that.
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when you’ve been so long in the desert, any water, no matter how brackish, looks like life


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Old 12-11-11, 06:49 PM   #6
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Just finished that last week, it was a gift for my mum last year, but she hasn't got around to reading it yet.
Aside from the detail in the printed word that is often lost in film adaptations, I thought it was reasonably faithful to the book.
It piqued my curiosity as to 'what the disaster was' that put an end to civilisation as we know it, the lack of a definite answer to this was something that added to the whole out of time feeling the book had, the isolation and detachment from what was before.

On the harshness scale of disaster/fall of mankind stories it was a little bit behind Lucifers Hammer in it's scale but had a more intimate character for all of that.
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Oh, absolutely. The movie was not bad at all. As to what the disaster was, I suppose it really doesn't matter, which is why McCarthy didn't bother telling us about it. The point of the book was the nature of man and the struggle to hang to what is 'right'.
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Old 12-12-11, 01:39 AM   #7
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Even the U.S. Military will justify cannibalism in an extreme survival situation.
One thing I was taught, and taught others in Egypt?
If a fellow Trooper dies? Cut him up and put his remains into a water trap if your stranded out in the desert.
Kind of gruesome yes. But survival depends mostly on your mindset.
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