Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Not An Open Letter To The Lady Who Killed The Lion King


As I sat down at my computer with my take-away Executive Breakfast this morning I opened Facebook and got ready for a little pre-work social networking. I smiled as I un-wrapped my favorite brekkie of 2 eggs, 3 rashers of bacon and 200g rump steak.

But what I saw as the page opened onto my news feed made me sick- a photo of some despicable woman kneeling next to the dead body of the Lion King, smiling demonically with rifle in hand. If it weren’t for my insatiable appetite for the flesh of farm animals I would have stopped eating right then and there!

As I continued to read, all the while chewing on bits of unfertilized chicken embryo and slithers off of a pigs back, it became apparently clear that this Lion King was actually part of a “canned hunting” scheme. I didn’t want to research it, but from my imagination what I gathered was that Yanks (or Brits and I’d like to add possibly Croatians and Westerosi) are crossing our borders and sneaking into the Kruger National Park to genocide these Lion Kings that are being bred like cattle for the slaughter on Lion King farms.    

Let me tell you, I was so shocked with my conclusion that bits of partially ground Bonsmara fell right out of my mouth onto my bloody plate! I mean, can you imagine, just these farms with herds and herds of Lion Kings grazing in the fields, or buildings where elephants are force fed to fatten them up for consumption, or slaughter houses dedicated to providing leopard braai meat for National Braai Day?

The story just reminded me so much of that elephant-hunting-family story that went viral a month or two ago. You know that one with an entire murderous family smiling next to that kind of extinct species elephant?

As I read through those 14 762 rage filled comments I felt myself nodding in agreement as people were hoping and praying for an opportunity to meet that family in the street and maybe perform some mob violence on them just as they had done to that extinctish elephant. Flip, by the end I was just so pumped to go out and end some serious human life!

But then some douche on the comments feed started talking about conservation and the importance of controlling elephant populations in national parks and I was like, “Conservayshun? Who’s that? Screw Him! WHAT DO WE WANT? Vast rampant herds of uncontrolled elephant. WHEN DO WE WANT IT? Now!

Anyway, tonight, after I finish my delicious meal of Atlantic Blue Marlin fillets, I’m going to write an open letter to that demon lady and that other family with really young kids from hell. All I want them to know is how this compassionate world will NOT stand by as they wipe out our population of animals that have featured as characters in Disney movies. They must expect to be Spanish Inquisitioned!

Afterword

It may or may not please you to know that I, in fact, hate hunting (canned hunting worst of all)! There are discussions about the effects (whether positive or negative) of canned lion hunting on the conservation of the species. These are held between specialists who know vastly more about the issue than any Facebooker. Still, I think it’s a horrible thing to do!

However, I also hate the double standards that people have. No one freaks out over the deaths of hundreds and thousands of cows for beef because no one has an emotional attachment to cows. I am a meat eater, so I realize the importance of the beef industry, but I don’t think the death of a cow is any less sad than the death of a Lion (except where conservation issues are concerned). What shocks me too is the violence directed from one human to another over these photos that have gone viral and the fact that people just don’t do research about these issues before they lash out. Anyway, this was just a fun post to have a dig at said lashers.


If you actually are interested in learning just a little about these issues, here are two links which might enlighten you as they have me… just a littleJ

Extinctish-but-not-really Elephants:


Issues concerning canned hunting of Lion Kings:

http://ewn.co.za/2013/06/03/Canned-lion-hunting-could-save-the-species