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Desecration

By Michael
Goodspeed
www.Thunderbolts.info
Article Reproduced from
www.Rense.com
11-18-7
- "There is no
anti-depressant that will cure a depression that's
spiritually based, for the malaise doesn't originate from
brain dysfunction, but from an accurate response to the
desecration of life."
- --Dr. David R.
Hawkins, Power Vs. Force
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- What I am about to tell
you is horrific, or worse. Not tantalizingly scary like a
"haunted house," not distasteful like a rude joke emphasizing
the lower bodily functions, not even "shocking" or "sickening" (descriptives
best reserved for Rob Zombie movies and the menu at Taco Bell).
The author Isak Dinesen commented, "I don't believe in evil, I
believe only in horror. In nature there is no evil, only an
abundance of horror: the plagues and the blights and the ants
and the maggots." Of course, horror exists in (and virtually
defines) nature, but the deliberate, unnecessary, brutal theft
of a life -- ANY life -- moves beyond the impersonal horror of
biologic decay and death, to the realm of DESECRATION, a
strictly human behavior that cannot reasonably be characterized
as "natural."
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- According to the ABC
news affiliate KATU (Portland, OR), police recently booked two
teenage boys on charges of aggravated animal abuse, after they
allegedly scalded a kitten with hot water, then cut off its head
with a hatchet. The website KATU.com reports: "The cat, a black
and white named White Socks, belonged to 19-year-old Shaina
Nelson. She told KATU News that she came back to her southeast
Portland apartment Thursday night and faced the alleged killer.
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- "'He jumps over the
fence...and he goes, 'The cat's dead,'' Nelson said. 'And he had
no emotion on is face. No. Nothing. He had no emotion at all.'"
(Full story: <
http://www.katu.com/news/local/11066866.html
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- Ironically, the young
woman had reportedly been helping out the two suspects, offering
them a place to stay in her home. The suspects (allegedly)
responded to her kind gesture by inflicting unimaginable pain on
her cat and then decapitating it.
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- KATU.com also reports,
"The suspects reportedly told police they wanted to put the cat
out of its misery after they burned it."
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- Above, you can see the
mug shots of the two suspects, aged 19 and 18. Just as described
by Ms. Nelson, the vacant eyes and slack expressions
reveal...precisely nothing. No intelligence, no warmth, no
personality, not even a spark of angry defiance. Nothing.
Nothing.
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- I'm not so arrogant as
to presume what kind of lives these alleged torturers and
killers have led. Maybe they are both victims of unimaginable
abuse and thus feel compelled to reenact their sufferings on
others. Perhaps they, like countless millions of American
youngsters, have been neurologically, emotionally, and
spiritually impaired by rancid cultural agents, including
pervasive media violence, psychotropic medications,
chemical-laden fast foods, aspartame, fluoride, cell-phones, a
collapsed education system, shopping malls, Hannah Montana,
etc., ad nauseam. The Internet is an astounding database for
evidence of this cultural apocalypse, and I don't feel the need
to elaborate on it here.
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- Instead, I would like
to encourage the reader to join me in a moment of honest
self-inquiry. Please ask yourself, how does it make you feel to
learn of the torture and death inflicted on this animal?
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- Do you feel angry?
Disgusted? Sad? If you are of sound mind and possess even the
vaguest respect for non-human life, I'm going to assume that you
feel all of the above. (Let me say parenthetically, what
constitutes "respect for life" may be a matter of some debate,
but it is a clinical FACT that the torture of animals indicates
deep-seeded mental illness, and is a reliable indicator of
future violence against HUMANS.) So if we can agree that anger,
disgust, and sadness are healthy and appropriate reactions to
the desecration of animal life, let us go a step further and
wonder, why?
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- Here is a fact that is
curious (at least to me): While a domestic animal like a kitten
can be a source of great joy and satisfaction for its owner, it
does not serve any utilitarian function in human life. In fact,
cats as pets tend to create significant burdens -- scratching up
furniture, peeing on rugs, killing frogs and mice and birds and
leaving shredded torsos on their owners' doorsteps, meowing at
all hours, getting pregnant and birthing massive litters, not to
mention the vet and food bills that will soar into the tens of
thousands before Chester or Abby finally expires.
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- From a neo-Darwinian
materialistic perspective, the human instinct to love and
nurture a weak, defenseless animal makes little if any sense.
Animals only serve our brute survival by providing food,
transportation, protection of home and body, and a few other
utilitarian chores (none of which are provided by cats and many
other common house pets). How did this joyous, irrepressible
affection for essentially "useless" animals "evolve" in a world
supposedly dominated by Survival of the Fittest?
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- Some might argue that
the adoration most humans feel for "cute" and "fuzzy" creatures
is just a sloppy quirk of the mammalian brain, nothing of any
significance. They might also suggest that we are allowed such
"indulgences" as affection for pets because we are long removed
from the jungle and its relentlessly savage laws. But these
notions are totally spurious. Number one, Survival of the
Fittest as "understood" by the caveman is understood at least
equally by the CEO. The guiding principles of our capitalist
society are "kill or be killed" and "screw everyone but me." So
from a neo-Darwinian perspective, altruistic behaviors are as
anomalous today as they were in the Cro-Magnon era. Consider
also that a lot of people love their pets like they do their own
children. Some would unhesitatingly risk their own lives to to
save the life of an animal -- ANY animal. A human being who
feeds a starving kitten is not serving the interests of his own
body or the interests of his "tribe." And yet for most, the
choice to aid a helpless animal isn't a "choice" at all, but
simply the very obvious Right Thing to Do. Because it FEELS
right. And the alternative feels terrible.
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- If you meet a friendly
dog while you're walking through a park, you don't bother with
inane formalities like introductions and handshakes. You just
say "Hi there!" and treat him with a touch of affection, as if
he were a lifelong friend. We love animals so fiercely because
we share with them an easy communion that is almost impossible
to achieve with other humans. People have egos, and egos are
ugly, defensive, fearful, and more dangerous than the most rabid
dog or feral cat. My ego is offended by your ego, and vice
versa. I'm not saying that animals are "superior" to humans in
any way. I'm saying that the guileless stare of a kitten or a
puppy is a perfect mirror reflecting back one's own true
essence.
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- This essence is more
than a body, more than humanness, more than animalness, more
than instinct and desire and survival and death. It is
lovingness, and it is sacred. For a sane person, the act of
loving and nurturing an animal is wholly selfish, because of the
fullness it provides in one's own heart. Because like attracts
like. And that likeness is love.
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- Except of, course, for
those who live in abject denial of their true, loving essence. I
dare say that the hollowed-eyed suspects above (if they are
guilty) are worthy of pity. C. S. Lewis commented to the effect
that evil is not the opposite of good, but the complete absence
of it. Anyone who deliberately inflicts pain on an animal has no
awareness of love, never tasted it, never extended it, and
almost certainly never received it. You might feel compelled to
wish these young men to hell, but rest assured, they are already
there.
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Rainbow
Bridge 
Just this
side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge.
When an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here, that pet
goes to Rainbow Bridge.
There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and
play together.
There is plenty of food, water and sunshine, and our friends are warm and
comfortable.
All the animals who had been ill and old are restored to health and vigor; those
who were hurt or maimed are made whole and strong again, just as we remember
them in our dreams of days and times gone by.
The animals are happy and content, except for one small thing; they each miss
someone very special to them, who had to be left behind.
They all run and play together, but the day comes when one suddenly stops and
looks into the distance. His bright eyes are intent; His eager body quivers.
Suddenly he begins to run from the group, flying over the green grass, his legs
carrying him faster and faster.
You have been spotted, and when you and your special friend finally meet, you
cling together in joyous reunion, never to be parted again. The happy kisses
rain upon your face; your hands again caress the beloved head, and you look once
more into the trusting eyes of your pet, so long gone from your life but never
absent from your heart.
Then you cross Rainbow Bridge together....
Author unknown...
Reproduced gratefully from:
http://www.petloss.com/poems/maingrp/rainbowb.htm
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