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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Saturday, April 11, 2015

8-foot-long cat-eating lizards invading Florida


A Nile monitor in South Africa.The lizards are native to almost all of Sub-Saharan Africa and grow up to 5 feet long on average, with large specimens reaching 7 or 8 feet. They typically have yellow markings on their back and can range in color from yellow to olive green or dark brown.

Environmentalists Gone Wild

  • Crazed environmentalists are sending out taxpayer funded hunting parties to slaughter the "cat eating" Nile Monitor Lizard because they are not natural whatever that means.
  • Personally, the "cat eating" part makes me want to defend the lizard.  After all cats can be a good source of lean protein for hungry inner city EBT card holders.


(Business Insider)  -  People buy a small snake, lizard, or colorful fish, and when it gets too big to handle, they dump it in an area in which they figure it will fit in. But if these unleashed creatures fit in too well, they not only thrive in their new homes — but without natural predators they can wreak havoc on the surrounding ecosystem, unbalancing it and potentially wiping out the native animals.
Lately we've heard a lot about the Burmese pythons and the more aggressive African rock pythonsthat wildlife officials fear will wipe out the foxes, rabbits, deer, raccoons, opossums, and bobcats of the Everglades.
But another creature that Florida wildlife officers are trying to get a handle on is the Nile monitor lizard, a cousin of the most famous monitor lizard, the Komodo dragon, which has been spreading through the state since at least 1990.
Hmmm . . . Dinner

Thousands are thought to be loose in parts of the state, but they have recently begun to appear in Palm Beach County, and officials are hoping they can eliminate the lizards in the area before they establish a firm toehold.
Wildlife officials armed with shotguns will be increasing patrols of Palm Beach County canals from once a month to four to six times a month to try to hunt the reptiles down, according to the Sun Sentinel. The plan is to catch or shoot the lizards on sight — they've got 20 in Palm Beach since July.
A Nile monitor in South Africa.The lizards are native to almost all of Sub-Saharan Africa and grow up to 5 feet long on average, with large specimens reaching 7 or 8 feet. They typically have yellow markings on their back and can range in color from yellow to olive green or dark brown.
And while they don't usually menace humans unless provoked (though one pet-education website says they "can inflict serious wounds to an inexperienced handler"), they are most definitely threats to local burrowing owls, tortoises, and other creatures. They have "even been known to eat cats," according to the Sun Sentinel.
Monitors have spread far enough that they are a serious problem, according to David A. Steen, a conservation biologist who included them on a list of the "worst invasive reptiles" he chronicled for Slate. He describes the Nile monitor as a "hulking beast" that's "a voracious predator of any creature smaller than itself."
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"I like Siamese if you please . . .
with gravy."


More on Crazy Environmentalists
Back in 2011 one of my first Blog articles was about insane environmentalists ordering the slaughter of elk on the California Channel Islands because elk are not "natural".
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Elk were slaughtered by Environmentalists.
.Elk were brought to the island in 1909 and thrived because of the lack of predators and good conditions.  Now with the elk and deer herds exterminated, hunters will no longer be allowed on the island because there will be nothing left to hunt . . . but the grass will be natural!
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See our original story
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Putting Jobs in a Museum

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