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To: GreenLanternCorps
I don't know what anyone else thinks about this subject,
and I guess this is a bleeding heart liberal position to
take. As for myself, I could do without zoos - period.
I've gone to zoos since I was 5 or 6 yrs. old and seen
animals, though probably well taken care of, in boring
& undignified situations. I saw a pair of tigers doing
obsessive, repetitious running & rolling in tandem in a
very small concrete and steel cage. I thought they had
probably been in a circus, but found out later that it was
simply their response to a terribly unnatural and boring
life. - If kids need to see animal specimens in a cage,
then have sculptors make replicas of them and put them in
those glass cases in a museum type setting. Let the wild
things be normal and wild. - My first trip was to the
Memphis zoo, where I guess I might have barely escaped
being "captured" myself by the notorious "kid snatching"
lady who kidnapped a lot of kids my age and adopted them
out (sold them). I forget her name.
41 posted on 03/23/2004 12:52:00 PM PST by Twinkie
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To: Twinkie
Inferno, I, 32
Jorge Luis Borges

From the half-light of dawn to the half-light of evening, the eyes of a leopard, in the last years of the twelfth century, looked upon a few wooden boards, some vertical iron bars, some varying men and women, a blank wall, and perhaps a stone gutter littered with dry leaves. The leopard did not know, could not know, that it yearned for love and cruelty and the hot pleasure of tearing flesh and a breeze with the scent of deer, but something inside it was suffocating and howling in rebellion, and God spoke to it in a dream: You shall live and die in this prison, so that a man that I have knowledge of may see you a certain number of times and never forget you and put your figure and your symbol into a poem, which has its exact place in the weft of the universe. You suffer captivity, but you shall have given a word to the poem. In the dream, God illuminated the animal's rude understanding and the animal grasped the reasons and accepted its fate, but when it awoke there was only an obscure resignation in it, a powerful ignorance, because the machine of the world is exceedingly complex for the simplicity of a savage beast.

Years later, Dante was to die in Ravenna, as unjustified and alone as any other man. In a dream, God told him the secret purpose of his life and work; Dante, astonished, learned at last who he was and what he was, and he blessed the bitternesses of his life. Legend has it that when he awoke, he sensed that he had received and lost an infinite thing, something he would never be able to recover, or even to descry from afar, because the machine of the world is exceedingly complex for the simplicity of men.

63 posted on 03/23/2004 2:02:47 PM PST by Heyworth
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