And how do we know? I am very sorry for the hapless Sardar Bajwa, but nobody
has the monkey side of the story. Are we sure that there aren't several dead
monkeys lying around somewhere in a monkey version of an elephants' graveyard,
having bitten off more than they could chew, or bitten off worse than they
expected to chew?
Given what we know of the Indian pol., my sympathies are with the monks
entirely.
Just an idea: can we get them trained to attack politicians selectively? Like
elephants sniff Masai clothes and run away trumpeting in terror? Don't say
anything out loud just yet, but do you see where this is going?
Deepa Mohan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 10/22/07, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
> On Monday 22 Oct 2007 7:44 am, Charles Haynes wrote:
> >> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/7055625.stm
> >>
> >> -- Charles
>
> Well, so these guys are talking about getting even more ferocious Langur
> monkeys into Delhi to get rid of these rhesus macaques, which are pretty
> damned scary themselves.
>
> What next? I guess they'll whistle up some 800lb gorillas once the Langurs
> kick the Rhesus monkeys out and start becoming a pest themselves?
>
> srs
>
>
And then, of course, they will get in the most dangerous primates of
all...the politicians. I am surprised that the macaques didn't die of
poisoning themselves!
Deepa.
Indrajit Gupta
Camp: Hyderabad
---------------------------------
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