Tag: Strange

  • Wild animals that do drugs and other strange things

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    In September 1985, authorities discovered the body of Andrew Thornton, a drug dealer, in Tennessee. He had a bag full of cocaine, a damaged parachute and the key to a small plane, which crashed some 100 kilometers away.

    Investigators spent months searching for the rest of his loot, which they suspected he had dropped along his air route. But in the North Georgia mountains, a black bear found him first, ingested the cocaine and overdosed.

    The curious but true story, which inspired the new movie ‘Intoxicated Bear’, is the result of an unusual confluence of events, and wildlife professionals in the United States said they had never seen another case like it.

    But experts have seen wild animals consume just about anything. And animals’ taste for human goods—licit and illegal—can cause problems for them and for us.

    Bears, which have a keen sense of smell, they have learned that humans are a reliable source of food. Sometimes bears even break into houses. In the Berkshire Mountains in Massachusetts, a thieving bear was routinely looking for frozen treats.

    “That bear was going into multiple homes and bypassing the available food, going straight to the freezer and eating snow,” said Andrew Madden, a supervisor with the Massachusetts Division of Fish and Wildlife.

    Bears sometimes trip over other substances. In October 2020, a man in Cotopaxi, Colorado, reported that a bear had raided an outdoor freezer and made off with marijuana edibles, said Joseph Livingston, public information officer for Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

    Another resident of that state reported that a bear had escaped with a cooler of beer, and bears have been observed chewing on beer cans, Livingston said.

    Recreational drugs can make wild animals sick. In 2018, the Gibsons Wildlife Rehabilitation Center in Gibsons, British Columbia, took in a stunned raccoon. Laboratory tests suggested that the animal had ingested marijuana and benzodiazepines, depressants often prescribed for anxiety.

    The center kept the animal calm, and after a few hours, it came to and was released.

    Even regular human food can present hazards.

    In September, wildlife officials found two dead black vultures in Dutchess County in New York. “The cause of death was theobromine/caffeine poisoning caused by material that looked and smelled like chocolate,” said Kevin Hynes, wildlife health program leader with the state Division of Fish and Wildlife.

    Animals that eat garbage often eat other things. Colorado officials had to euthanize a bear they found in a dumpster; an autopsy revealed his stomach was “full of plastic and cigarette butts and really nasty stuff,” Livingston said.

    And some animals, including bears, move from yards to homes, creating “a situation where it’s now a threat and needs to be removed,” said Dave Wattles, a biologist with the Massachusetts Division of Fish and Wildlife. Experts recommend that people dispose of trash properly and store pet food, trash, and other treats indoors safely. People should also refrain from feeding wildlife, they said, and, allegedly, from dropping cocaine from planes.

    By: Emily Anthes

    BBC-NEWS-SRC: http://www.nytsyn.com/subscribed/stories/6589545, IMPORTING DATE: 2023-02-27 23:10:07

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    #Wild #animals #drugs #strange
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Opinion | The GOP’s Strange Budget Strategy

    Opinion | The GOP’s Strange Budget Strategy

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    George W. Bush’s compassionate conservatism was an implicit rebuke of Newt Gingrich’s bomb-throwing majorities that tried to balance the budget at all costs. Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again populism was a rejection of Paul Ryan’s debt-obsessed majority that hoped to move the goal posts on entitlement reform.

    The problem is that Ryan was right about the substance and Trump is right about the politics, and that dilemma — in a nutshell — is why the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio is nearly 100 percent and is projected to keep climbing.

    Like the ne’er-do-well occasionally convinced to scrub up and show up at church on a Sunday, the GOP experiences spasms of fiscal rectitude, followed by longer bouts of going along with the usual Washington practice of devil-may-care fiscal blowouts.

    The party is waging a generational effort … once every 10 years or so. It is showing great staying power … in between the times it barely talks about the issue at all.

    It had looked like GOP fiscal hawks had either all molted into big-government populists, or at least were happy to associate themselves with that flock. So it’s been some comfort to anyone concerned about spending that the House Republican backbench has sounded almost indistinguishable from the GOP conference back in the tea party heyday of 2011.

    Of course, Republican budget hawks would have more credibility if their passion and commitment didn’t seem contingent on — with some honorable exceptions — a Democrat being in the White House. They obviously could have more influence, if they were gutsy enough to exercise it, over a President Trump or DeSantis than they can ever hope to have over a President Biden.

    That said, Republicans never want to spend as much as Democrats do (although they want to cut taxes more), and the dynamic in Washington in recent years meant that if the GOP wanted to relieve depleted defense accounts, they had to give Democrats the non-defense spending that they wanted.

    Now, the barely comprehensible levels of pandemic-era spending over the last three years, when Washington has run more than $7 trillion of budget deficits, should be enough to give anyone pause.

    As the economist Herb Stein famously said, if something can’t go on forever, it will stop. No one can know how long we can go on with the debt on the current trajectory without baleful consequences — it could be 20 years, it could be 20 months. Prudence suggests that we should avoid finding out.

    And that inevitably means squeezing the entitlements that Trump — the party’s past president and perhaps future nominee — says shouldn’t be cut by a penny.

    If the federal budget consisted only of discretionary spending, it’d be in decent enough shape.

    With some upward jags — the war on terror, the financial crisis — both domestic and defense discretionary spending are down as a percent of GDP from their levels in the 1980s.

    As budget maven Brian Riedl of the Manhattan Institute points out, mandatory spending is where the action is.

    In 1965, mandatory spending was 34 percent of total federal spending; in 2022, it was 71 percent. Social Security and Medicare alone are now 34 percent of the budget.

    In 2032, Social Security, health entitlements and interest costs are projected to account for 86 percent of the increase in spending over 2008 levels, according to Riedl. The growing Social Security and Medicare shortfalls will account for almost all of the growing deficit over the next 10 years. (The 2017 GOP tax cuts contribute to the projected deficits going forward, but only marginally.)

    The scale of the challenge means that Republicans are unlikely to produce any plan to balance the budget in 10 years, certainly not one without huge magic asterisks.

    Making some progress against spending this year during the debt ceiling fight would be welcome. But — with a hostile press, a divided party (many Senate Republicans aren’t on board with brinkmanship) and markets that will flip out if the limit isn’t extended on time — the GOP’s expectations for the showdown should be realistic.

    Still, the debt limit is a natural point of leverage. Republicans are fooling themselves if they think it’s going to unlock a new era of austerity, but the White House is delusional if it thinks it can refuse to negotiate at all.

    Republicans should seek limits on discretionary spending (although it’s tricky because now is not the time to cut back on defense spending during a time of geopolitical challenge from Russia and China); push some technical, not particularly important savings on entitlements; and embrace the TRUST Act that would create bipartisan committees to at least get the conversation going on how to keep Social Security and Medicare from going insolvent and/or overwhelming the budget.

    If this seems small beer compared to the Budget Control Act adopted during the debt showdown in 2011, it should be remembered that the law’s caps quickly eroded and then disappeared entirely.

    More important than what happens over the next few months is whether the party can nominate and elect a president in 2024 who, unlike Bush or Trump, is in sympathy with the fiscal conservatism of House conservatives.

    Even that won’t be a magic bullet, since the public will still need persuading that medium-term changes to Social Security and Medicare don’t represent a clear and present threat to its well-being.

    Otherwise, even what a decade or so ago would have seemed an embarrassingly modest goal — keeping the debt at roughly 90 percent of GDP — will be out of reach.

    Ronald Reagan quipped that the deficit was big enough to take care of itself. Now, it’s big enough that no single high-stakes battle or act of Congress is going to tame it. Fiscal hawks have to be in for the long haul.

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    #Opinion #GOPs #Strange #Budget #Strategy
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )