christina
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@waynehhsiung How do we save the other 500? I can’t stop thinking about the ones that weren’t saved
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Glenn, as usual, nails it. This is a feel-good story, but there's a darkness underneath:
Our own government's collusion with the industry to torture dogs—and crush anyone who opposes it.
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald
Most decent people, by definition, view the liberation of these Ridglan beagles as a feel-good story. They were bred to live short lives of sadistic (and utterly gratuitous) government-funded experiments, then unceremoniously killed, and instead now are living as dogs should. But this is because activists spent years working for this outcome, often arrested and even investigated by industry-controlled FBI and state legislatures as terrorists. They deserve immense credit and respect for their success.
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christina retweetledi

Most decent people, by definition, view the liberation of these Ridglan beagles as a feel-good story. They were bred to live short lives of sadistic (and utterly gratuitous) government-funded experiments, then unceremoniously killed, and instead now are living as dogs should.
But this is because activists spent years working for this outcome, often arrested and even investigated by industry-controlled FBI and state legislatures as terrorists. They deserve immense credit and respect for their success.
Wayne Hsiung@waynehhsiung
Running circles is way more fun when you're out of a Ridglan cage! And your new brother teaches you how to play! (Turn sound on for the squeak!)
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These beagles deserve only the best.
newsnationnow.com/us-news/ap-us-…
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Meet Bumpy the baby hippo!
This is NOT AI.
My beloved @SheldrickTrust is best known for its rescue, raising, and reintegration of orphaned baby elephants, but as some of you have come to learn over the years, no orphan is left without a home and love when it comes to Sheldrick.
Bumpy, a son of Kenya, is just one week old.
Bumpy’s mom likely was killed in a territorial fight while defending him. He was found standing next to her body, confused about what had happened, desperately nudging her with his nose.
Without his mom around anymore, and being only a week old, Bumpy needs to be raised by hand for a few years (male hippos can’t survive without their mothers until about 2–3 years old).
So my pals at the Sheldrick Trust got their rescue engine fired up, and next thing you know, Bumpy got his first — and likely only — helicopter ride when Taru Carr Hartley scooped him up to bring him to the Sheldrick facilities in Kaluku.
I always wonder how these babies experience the helicopter — is it like an alien abduction to them?
As you can see in these photos, just as the orphaned baby elephants do, Bumpy will have a keeper sleep next to him every night.
While no human keeper can ever replace the love of his mother, you can rest assured that the keepers of the Sheldrick Trust—along with the staff—will love and protect him until he’s ready to return to the wild.
To learn more about Bumpy and to adopt him (which means you’ll get updates on him), click the link in the post below!

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@StuffKSaid You’re not allowed to delete anything? I dk kick rules
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