it's surprisingly easy to recognize when someone is trying to noticed. attention seeking behavior tends to follow very predictable patterns.
sometimes it's rarely subtle, sometimes it's disappointingly obvious. there's a certain consistency in people who want to get noticed, it makes them easy to read.
Hi there, I was wondering if you could offer me some advice or tips! I recently rescued 2 Amsterdam Bearded Tumblers from a hoarding situation (unfortunately I dont know more specifics about the conditions they were in except the cages were very small for each bird and there were over 20 of them together). They're bonded hens and I've had them since May. Recently, they've started getting, for lack of a better word, extremely feral when it comes time to feed them. Jumping up and clinging to the cage walls, sticking their heads through the bars, climbing all over each other. I'm not entirely sure how to curb this behavior, because I certainly dont want them to injure themselves or the other. The rescue place we adopted them from says they're likely around 4 years old. I'm wondering if theres anything I should change about their feeding schedule or even cage set up to help calm them down. I feed them Versele Laga pigeon food and supplement their diet with protein pellets as well and I have them in a chinchilla sort of cage that's quite tall with different ramps and levels to it. I've owned several doves and cockatiels before adopting these two, but this behavior is new to me. Thank you so much for your time!
I'm glad to help, but I will need more detail to piece together what might be going on with your girls.
Can you send a photo of the cage, show me where their food dishes are, exactly, and tell me how you go about approaching?
Did anything that you know of change leading up to them having gotten skittish?
So just then I was re-watching Disney's underrated "Dinosaur" (2000), and there happened to be this scene where they've reached the watering hole just to find out it dried up, shortly after, Aladar found a way to get them water with Baylene's help.
Without hesitation, he called out to the rest of the herd.
and unfortunately, had to deal with a pretty rough, unexpected backlash when he tried containing their reaction, and basically got flooded.
That was when someone called him "stupid"..? I couldn't get where that came from so, I asked, and was answered with:
" He should've waited for the older ones to be done drinking first before calling others, to avoid this kind of situation."
So, what makes him stupid is basically lacking your knowledge ..?
If we shall take a look back on his life ..
Aladar was the unchallengeable creature on his island, meaning that he never really had to experience opposition, that along with the way he was raised, never fed the "potential threat" he could've become.
° °
Though it's also obvious that before the catastrophic meteor shower, he never went through scarcity of resources, which would lead us to remember that even when he did, it'd only shown his true nature;
(He was the last one digging, though he wasn't any less thirsty than the rest, but look at his proud smile! and him stepping back for them to start drinking first)
He'd proven to be an altruist..
time and time again.
Hence, clashing against self-seeking behavior was rather perplexing to him.. (not like he knows what that even is..)
° °
Knowing that already should naturally interpret that he wasn't "stupid", but inexperienced..
If we'll be setting that way of ignorant thinking, we'd easily put aside his motives & assume that Aladar staying behind with the "weak" was because he's an idiot. (Deliberately ignoring that it was out of benevolence)
And Bruton's death was an illogicality.. not at all sacrificial or noble
° °
The issue with applying that behavior irl is ignoring facts & passing judgment without taking the other side's morals, characteristics, knowledge, and motives into account. which wouldn't only make them feel misunderstood, but makes you terribly misinformed!
You managed to know everything but somehow ended up understanding nothing. How unfortunate.
In the United States, the primary antagonistic actor against the working class is the circuit court system, which runs amok violating federal law and the constitution on a daily basis, while also laundering money for drug cartels and other actors tied to foreign intelligence.
The U.S. federal court system is supposed to be able to be used by the working class as an enforcement mechanism against unlawful lower court and corporate actors, but there is an entity preventing that from occurring.
At the individual state level, the U.S. government is run by quasi-government affiliated and government adjacent entities that actively sabotage the daily lives of the working class.
Whether the federal government is tied to the quasi-state foreign intelligence affiliated actors or not, they have the information available to realize what is happening and are doing nothing about it.
U.S. state and local internet connected systems have the fingerprints and the financial trail of being sourced from Israeli intelligence.
Police Interrogations: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) [source]
“John Oliver discusses the tactics that can make police interrogations so damaging, particularly for the innocent, and why he’s more of a Lorelai than a Rory.” [24 min 42 sec]
OK! Something great/funny just happened! Here is a bit of background.
You can make an account on the F.B.I’s website or if you ever go through/apply for F.B.I academy, internships, you use your email. And if you want, they will send you newsletters, announcements, and job openings. (Like with anything you put your email in)
Well, I got an email the other day for them, and just got around to looking at it today. I was looking at the new job openings and I am losing it!
Let’s take a closer look at two of the open positions, shall we....
I honestly can’t even! This isn’t the job I want with them but....
Come on! This is too perfect! The Criminal Minds fan in me had a really good laugh about this and thought I should share it with you.