Sunday, September 21, 2008

Humans, not cats, are the true killing machines

Dear George
I spend a lot of time hunting in the nearby hedges, in the village were I live. I brought a mouse home yesterday through the cat flap and there were shrieks as it slipped out of my mouth in the kitchen. My humans don't seem to like the fact that I go hunting almost every day. Yet it's the activity which gives my whole life its joy and meaning.
Yorkshire Patch

Dear Patch,
We all have difficulties with our humans about this one, - that is if we live in a nice family home rather than a barn or stables. Humans like the idea that we keep down the mice numbers but they are also queasy about seeing us doing it. Humans are dreadful hypocrites on this issue.
A few thousand years ago, we noticed that humans needed cats. Indeed mice are the cause of the cat-human relationship. They had started growing grain and building granaries and we moved in. Soon we saw that humans would be better off if we domesticated them, so we moved further into their homes and the close cat-human relationship was off and away. 
However domesticated they are, humans like us don't seem to have lost the killing instinct. Their instinct is worse than ours. We kill mice and usually eat them. They kill each other. That is unimaginable in cat society.
Over the past 9000 years of domestication we have tried to teach them how to live in peace with each other. We keep the peace instinctively. True, there are cat fights over willing females occasionally but more often than not, our toms just line up peacefully for a go. Why fight when there is plenty to go round and our females seem to enjoy it.
We deal with conflict much better than humans do. We avoid it.OK so we do a bit of posturing and hissing but most of the time we just walk round each other. If you look at how cats live together in a home (in a group of unrelated animals which is totally unlike the normal closely related wild cat colony), we manage ourselves by avoiding each other. 
We have our separate beds and favourite places and, unless we are forced to, we eat at seperate times. If we do fight, there may be wounds but we don't kill. We time share rather than sharing - unless we are good friends or relatives in which case we eat together and sleep touching each other.
Humans at low levels of society seem to manage this but once there are thousands of them it all goes wrong. They band together in large packs and slaughter each other. They don't even fight fairly with their feet and hands. They invent weapons which allow themselves to kill each other from thousands of miles away. They even slaughter babies and females. So it is the greatest hypocrisy when they object to the odd dead, or not so dead, mouse.
Yes, we have our hunting instincts. Yes we kill mice and rabbits and lizards and insects. We are predators. But so are humans. They prey on their own kind. We don't kill other cats. They kill each other in the millions. 
Humans could learn from us if they weren't so arrogant.

6 comments:

  1. My humans actually hunt. The male goes out and bangs away with a shotgun. It's better than killing other humans but it strikes me as rather unfair. He kills at a distance without any effort. It takes me at least three pounces to catch one mouse.
    Geraldine.

    ReplyDelete
  2. yes, humans are the most dangerous animal alive. i do not go outside since i've been rescued (i'm a former feral), but i remember the taste of fresh mouse, yum.

    i think it humans are going to kill each other or other animals, they should have to use only what they are born with, no weapons. of course, they don't and that seems more wrong

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm the great hunter in the family. You see my humans don't hunt, but they have friends that hunt. It seems to me like the humans are sneaky, they use guns and bows and the animal never knows what hunted them. On the contrary, the things I hunt KNOW who I am, well only after I pounce on them because I am very quiet when I hunt and I'm very patient. Human need lots of training. Sometimes I think they are all hopeless.

    ReplyDelete
  4. My humans know that if I bring them a dead or not-so-dead mouse/mole/rat/bird it is for use as a teaching aid, to help them learn how to hunt. They do try, bless 'em, but their fingernails are blunt and their canine teeth are too, so I usually wind up doing the deed myself.

    It's a hard life ;)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yes, we cats are predators. So are humans but they pretend not to be. That's the difference.
    Poppy

    ReplyDelete
  6. Very well written post. Humans are the most dangerous and harmful predator on the planet. If we don't watch out, we are liable to hunt ourselves into extinction.

    ReplyDelete

Help for cats whose humans show behaviour problems.

This blog is devoted to the study of human behaviour. We cats, who live with this sometimes unpredictable and always feeble minded species, can benefit from seeing their behaviour in its proper scientific context. The study of feline dilemmas, training problems, and difficulties with humans, can only benefit all of us. All of us train our humans - to buy the right food, for instance, but many of us do not have knowledge of how to improve our training methods. The human species is obviously not as intelligent as the cat, but nevertheless can learn quite a lot - if properly managed. Topics of interest include the use of claw and order, purring as a human reward, rubbing your human up the right way, when to bite, spraying as a method of making our wishes known, ignoring the human, human harassment, human inattention and sheer human stupidity. I welcome your questions. Photos can be sent via my secretary's website, www.celiahaddon.com This blog has been chosen as one of the top 50 feline blogs by Online VetTechprogramms.org