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$2,500 HSUS reward. Dog killings.

Posted in News on May 12th, 2008 by PM

$2,500 HSUS reward. Dog killings.

The HSUS Offers Reward In Lincoln County, Mont. Dog Killings. The Humane Society of the United States is offering a $2,500 reward for information leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of the person or people responsible for killing at least nine dogs in the Libby, Troy and Eureka areas of Montana over the past five weeks. Read the rest of this entry »

Congressional hearing tomorrow: Kempthorne hides, Center testifies.

Posted in Endangered, Issues/Opinions, Law, News on April 1st, 2008 by hesso

Congressional hearing tomorrow: Kempthorne hides, Center testifies.

The Bush administration’s refusal to list the polar bear as an endangered species took a bizarre turn last week when Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne refused to testify at tomorrow’s Senate hearing. Read the rest of this entry »

Polar bears feeling more heat.

Posted in Endangered, Issues/Opinions, Mammals on March 17th, 2008 by PM

A few posts ago PM presented incredible polar bear photos. The images by themselves are remarkable. But the polar bear is more than the largest predator on this planet. They have become a global warming symbol. It’s an easy analogy. The bears live on ice. The ices is melting. Easy picture here. Here is another polar bear story, and another global warming hot-spot.

The bears may have more problems…

polarrug1.jpg

Today Salon.com. comes to the forefront highlighting yet another polar bear worry. Part of their story is in this post with a link to the full story…

If your idea of a good time is paying $25,000 to journey to the frozen north in Canada to shoot a polar bear—making you one of the more than 50 American “sportsmen” who do so every year—you’re not happy about the lawsuits and recriminations over whether the Bush administration should grant new protections to polar bears. After all, those darn regulations could interfere with your bringing home a furry white rug for your living room floor.

In the reams of press about the increasing deaths of polar bears, the role of trophy hunters and the Inuit who help them is often missing. In the Canadian territories where the polar bear lives, the government sets quotas for the number of bears that can be hunted each year. The Canadian Inuit, who are paid by hunters to help them stalk the bears, and American hunting associations have become vocal adversaries to environmentalists and Congress members who in recent months have battled the Department of Interior, with its Bush-Cheney oil connections, to safeguard the polar bear.

Today, there are between 20,000 and 25,000 polar bears worldwide, according to the World Conservation Union Species Survival Commission’s Polar Bear Specialist Group, which lists the species as “vulnerable.” Between 700 and 900 polar bears are shot every year, the majority of those taken in Canada, according to Andrew Derocher, a biologist at the University of Alberta, who chairs the Polar Bear Specialist Group. Of the approximately 600 polar bears shot in Canada, about 15 percent of those are killed by sports hunters, many of them American, who pay between $20,000 to $35,000 for the chance to do so. Read the rest of this entry »

Tiny Iowa town rescinds $5 cat bounty.

Posted in Mammals, News, Oddly enough on March 17th, 2008 by hesso

Tiny Iowa town rescinds $5 cat bounty

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)—Cat haters, never mind: The tiny town of Randolph has rescinded a $5 bounty on feral feline.

A picture worth a thousand words.

Posted in Death, Issues/Opinions on February 28th, 2008 by PM

Winding down a pleasant day when this post found its way here. The story provided by The reality of what humans do needs few words from us. Their post “a picture worth a thousand words” is compelling. Visit their site for a more complete story.

paws-dead1.jpg

The graphic picture shows the grim reality of pet over-population. The photo caption reads: Two days’ worth of euthanized animals sit in barrels in cold storage at the Kern County Animal Shelter on Mount Vernon Avenue. The small animal shelter euthanizes about 25,000 animals every year.

Stories like this are difficult to report. But with dialog solutions come easier. Here are two more posts that mention the issue of neutering at lady omega and animals as friends

The HSUS offers reward in Indianapolis horse shooting.

Posted in Death, Law, News, Oddly enough on February 19th, 2008 by PM

The HSUS offers reward in Indianapolis horse shooting.

The Humane Society of the United States is offering a reward up to $2,500 for information leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of the person or people responsible for the shooting death of ­a 29-year-old quarter horse, who was found dead in the back yard of an Indianapolis woman’s home. Read the rest of this entry »

Submissions

Posted in Uncategorized on February 11th, 2008 by PM

From our very beginning Pet Monologues was to be a source of creative that is all about animals. We spread out a bit since then. Ready! Fire! Aim!
We guess!

Creative content-makers.
Writing—A writer, aspiring writer, student? Do you know anyone who likes to write great prose?

Art—artist, photographer, sculptor, designer? That would include fine art, photography, cartoons, sculpture, products.

Really, anyone feels who is passionate about pets and animals.

Creative recognition.
PM would be honored to present your creative effort. PM is currently building a “creative recognition” capability to give our contributors recognition. Pet Monologue’s editors select and award exceptional original submissions and place stories in our Editor’s Choice category. There is a Reader’s Choice category also.

Submissions.
In order to submit a story you are asked to Register. All submissions and comments are moderated before going online.

Stories and art works do not have to be your own. We will categorize accordingly. If the story is not your own, please give us the creator’s name if you know it, a date if known, and where your source came from. If your source is online please include a link to help us credit the story correctly.

Artwork.
All artwork that we upload is in a .jpg, .gif, or /png file format, 400px wide, 72 dpi, between 400-700mg. We can accept LARGER files and will downsize as needed.

Having trouble?
Registration: help is here
Write a story: help is here.
Upload artwork? help is here.

More questions?
Try our FAQ
Contact us: click here

And finally.
You must be 18 years of age to Register. If a Registered writer wishes to submit stories from younger writers, please let us know specifics at the time of submission. Young writers and artists work will be placed in the “Just kids” category. Writer between the ages of 13-17, will be placed in the Just teens category. Pet Monologues periodically sweeps this site for content. We encourage all ages to write!

We are not lawyers but we know one or two. Here is the obligatory legal and privacy blurb.

We want to hear your story!

Contact us

Story time

Posted in Uncategorized on February 11th, 2008 by PM

We came across two provocative commentaries concerning time, a very limited quantity these days, and the power of story telling:

1) A book introduction…

Everybody is a story. When I was a child, people sat around kitchen tables and told their stories. We don’t do that so much anymore. Sitting around the table telling stories is not just a way of passing time. It is the way wisdom gets passed along. The stuff that helps us live a life worth remembering. Despite the awesome powers of technology many of us still do not live very well. We may need to listen to each other’s stories once again.

Most of the stories we are told now are written by novelists and screenwriters, acted out by actors and actresses, stories that have beginnings and endings, stories that are not real. The stories we can tell each other have no beginning and ending. They are a front-row seat to the real experience. Even though they may have happened in a different time or place they have a familiar feel. In some way they are about us too.

Real stories take time. We stopped telling stories when we started to lose that sort of time, pausing time, reflecting time, wondering time. Life rushes us along and few people are strong enough to stop on their own. Most often, something unforeseen stops us and it is only then we have the time to take a seat at life’s kitchen table. To know our own story and tell it. To listen to others people stories. To remember that the real world is made of just such stories.

Until we stop ourselves or, more often, have been stopped, we hope to put certain of life’s events “behind us” and get on with our living. After we stop we see that certain of life’s issues again and again, each time with a new story, each time with a greater understanding, until they become indistinguishable from our blessings and our wisdom. It’s the way life teaches us how to live.

When we haven’t the time to listen to each other’s stories we seek out experts to tell us how to live. The less time we spend together at the kitchen table, the more how-to-books appear in the stories on our bookshelves. But reading such books is a very different thing than listening to someone’s lived experience. Because we have stopped listening to each other we may even have forgotten how to listen, stopped learning how to recognize meaning and fill ourselves from the ordinary events of our lives. We have become solitary; readers and watchers rather than sharers and participants.

Taken from “Kitchen Table Wisdom” by Rachel naomi Remen, M.D.

2) A newspaper article…

Steven Bochco has seen the future of television, and it doesn’t include the twenty-somethings marketers covet.

“It astonishes me to the extent that young people don’t watch TV anymore,” said the Emmy-award-winning writer and producer of groundbreaking dramas “Hill Street Blues,” “L.A. Law” and “NYPD Blue.”

Those young people still watch some television, of course, but at the same time they check out profiles at Facebook, watch last night’s opening from the “Daily Show” on YouTube or engage in multiple instant-message chats.

It’s a trend called “content snacking,” and it is wreaking havoc among traditional media providers. So, like a showman of another era, Bochco’s going to where the audience has focused its attention: the Web.

His newest project, Cafe Confidential, launches Monday at video Web site Metacafe.com. The premise is “deceptively simple,” he said. It is just someone in front of a camera telling a story. There are no whiz-bang graphics or background mood music. The only embellishment: hand gestures and facial expressions. And while the roughly two-minute clips lack the emotional punch of Bochco’s ensemble television dramas, they are far from dull.

Bochco simply lets the young adults talk. They chat about their first sexual experience, their weird families, the times they had too much to drink, and how they’ve screwed up at work.

“For the last 10 years, there’s been a pretty consistent reaching out to the entertainment community to do something” on the Web, he said. “What always struck me about those conversations is that they looked at old models of TV shows,” like a 30-minute sitcom or an hourlong drama.

“That’s not what young people are looking for today. They are looking at the Internet for a distraction. In between homework assignments, they may say `I’m going to spend five to 10 minutes on the Web.’-”

“It’s a sea change,” said Bochco of how open people have become online, calling it “a significant cultural shift. People are willing to tell you anything.”

If there’s one aspect of Bochco’s project that intrigues him besides the willingness of ordinary people to be so open, it is that the videos reflect a tradition the Internet is not good at preserving: storytelling.

“I grew up in a generation of storytellers,” said Bochco, born in 1943.

For more details chicagotribune.com ©2007 Chicago Tribune. Story by Eric Benderoff.

Legal

Posted in Uncategorized on February 11th, 2008 by PM

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Court rejects timber industry attack on threatened seabird.

Posted in Endangered, Law, News on February 11th, 2008 by hesso

Court rejects timber industry attack on threatened seabird.

WASHINGTON DC—On February 5 the courts thwarted the timber industry’s latest attack on the marbled murrelet. Read the rest of this entry »


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