Posts Tagged ‘Going Hunting’
Why now and then, warrior colonial powers feel the urge to go hunting?
Why a few animal species are preserved, while underdeveloped people are still ripe for extermination?
Going Hunting (first posted in 1998)
1. I’m going to war.
My government has decided.
I need to release my animal instincts.
For economic reasons,
For political reasons,
For religious reasons.
I’m going to war, today,
For no reasons:
Just kicking butts.
2. What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I’ve never seen animals killing others
From miles away.
I’ve never seen an animal
Who has just gorged
On hamburger and pizza,
Going a-prowling,
To kill and maim.
3. Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
In clean and spec fur,
Shining from shoulders to boots.
Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
To eat more and get drunk silly.
They used to find themselves a cool shade
To rest and sleep off the feast.
4. What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I had a dream of cannibals at war
And I was a reporter of this war.
Once a victor felled his enemy, he would kneel and achieve him.
The victor is serenely and religiously eating his enemy flesh, raw.
For him, the war is already over: He stops killing other victims,
He is not helping his tribe warriors to overcome more enemies.
His enemies will not interfere with his eating;
They stay away from this pair,
Both finally at peace.
5. For both the victor and the victim the war is over.
When the dust of war settles down all the living warriors,
From both waring camps
Prepare a joint bonfire and finish off the remains of their victims.
They leave the battlefield in peace.
They don’t carry any leftovers:
Nature and its beasts need to take their shares of the slaughter.
What animal instincts do they fear in me?
Underdeveloped people are still being exterminated
By preemptive wars, mass killing weapons,
Medical experiments and testing of vaccines
Mass transfer of people to less fertile regions
Burning of virgin forests
Private acquisition of fresh water sources
Polluting rivers and lands with their poisoned waste…
And they are still warning us of climate change
And the colonization of space and other planets
How come Colonial powers keep fearing my Animal Instincts?
What animal instincts do they fear in me?
Posted by: adonis49 on: June 12, 2020
What animal instincts do they fear in me?
And all those Mercenaries are “Going Hunting”
Note: Re-edit of “Going Hunting (Written in 1998 and reposted in November 16, 2019)
- I’m going to war.
My government has decided.
I need to release my animal instincts.
For economic reasons,
For political reasons,
For religious reasons.
I’m going to war, today,
For no reasons:
Just for kicking butts.
- What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I’ve never seen animals killing others
From miles away.
I’ve never seen an animal
Who has just gorged
On hamburger and pizza,
Going a-prowling,
To kill and maim.
- Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
In clean and spec fur,
Shining from shoulders to boots.
4. Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
To eat more and get drunk silly.
Carnivorous animals used to find themselves a cool shade
To rest and sleep off the feast.
5. What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I had a dream of cannibals at war
And I was a reporter of this war.
Once a victor felled his enemy, he would kneel and achieve him.
The victor is serenely and religiously eating his enemy flesh, raw.
For him, the war is already over:
He stops killing other victims,
He is not helping the warriors of his tribe to overcome more enemies.
His enemies will not interfere with his eating;
They stay away from this pair,
Both finally at peace.
For both, the victor and the victim, the war is over.
6. When the dust of war settles down all the living warriors from both camps
Prepare a joint bonfire and finish off the remains of their victims.
They leave the battlefield in peace.
They don’t carry any leftovers:
Nature and its beasts need to take their shares of the slaughter.
What animal instincts do they fear in me?
And all those Mercenaries are “Going Hunting”
Note: I have the pleasure for the readers to remind me of the pieces that I have posted long time ago. I enjoy re-reading them and updating them when need be.
Going Hunting (1998)
- I’m going to war.
My government has decided.
I need to release my animal instincts.
For economic reasons,
For political reasons,
For religious reasons.
I’m going to war, today,
For no reasons:
Just kicking butts.
- What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I’ve never seen animals killing others
From miles away.
I’ve never seen an animal
Who has just gorged
On hamburger and pizza,
Going a-prowling,
To kill and maim.
- Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
In clean and spec fur,
Shining from shoulders to boots.
Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
To eat more and get drunk silly.
They used to find themselves a cool shade
To rest and sleep off the feast.
- What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I had a dream of cannibals at war
And I was a reporter of this war.
Once a victor felled his enemy, he would kneel and achieve him.
The victor is serenely and religiously eating his enemy flesh, raw.
For him, the war is already over:
He stops killing other victims,
He is not helping the warriors of his tribe to overcome more enemies.
His enemies will not interfere with his eating;
They stay away from this pair,
Both finally at peace.
For both, the victor and the victim, the war is over.
- When the dust of war settles down all the living warriors from both camps
Prepare a joint bonfire and finish off the remains of their victims.
They leave the battlefield in peace.
They don’t carry any leftovers:
Nature and its beasts need to take their shares of the slaughter.
What animal instincts do they fear in me?
Going Hunting (1998)
- I’m going to war.
My government has decided.
I need to release my animal instincts.
For economic reasons,
For political reasons,
For religious reasons.
I’m going to war, today,
For no reasons:
Just kicking butts.
- What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I’ve never seen animals killing others
From miles away.
I’ve never seen an animal
Who has just gorged
On hamburger and pizza,
Going a-prowling,
To kill and maim.
- Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
In clean and spec fur,
Shining from shoulders to boots.
Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
To eat more and get drunk silly.
They used to find themselves a cool shade
To rest and sleep off the feast.
- What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I had a dream of cannibals at war
And I was a reporter of this war.
Once a victor felled his enemy, he would kneel and achieve him.
The victor is serenely and religiously eating his enemy flesh, raw.
For him, the war is already over: He stops killing other victims,
He is not helping his tribe worriers to overcome more enemies.
His enemies will not interfere with his eating;
They stay away from this pair,
Both finally at peace.
- For both the victor and the victim the war is over.
When the dust of war settles down all the living warriors from both camps
Prepare a joint bonfire and finish off the remains of their victims.
They leave the battlefield in peace.
They don’t carry any leftovers:
Nature and its beasts need to take their shares of the slaughter.
What animal instincts do they fear in me?
Going Hunting
Posted by: adonis49 on: September 20, 2008
Going Hunting (1998)
1. I’m going to war.
My government has decided.
I need to release my animal instincts.
For economic reasons,
For political reasons,
For religious reasons.
I’m going to war, today,
For no reasons:
Just kicking butts.
2. What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I’ve never seen animals killing others
From miles away.
I’ve never seen an animal
Who has just gorged
On hamburger and pizza,
Going a-prowling,
To kill and maim.
3. Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
In clean and spec fur,
Shining from shoulders to boots.
Never seen an animal
Returning from the hunt,
To eat more and get drunk silly.
They used to find themselves a cool shade
To rest and sleep off the feast.
4. What animal instincts do they fear in me?
I had a dream of cannibals at war
And I was a reporter of this war.
Once a victor felled his enemy, he would kneel and achieve him.
The victor is serenely and religiously eating his enemy flesh, raw.
For him, the war is already over: He stops killing other victims,
He is not helping his tribe worriers to overcome more enemies.
His enemies will not interfere with his eating;
They stay away from this pair,
Both finally at peace.
5. For both the victor and the victim the war is over.
When the dust of war settles down all the living warriors from both camps
Prepare a joint bonfire and finish off the remains of their victims.
They leave the battlefield in peace.
They don’t carry any leftovers:
Nature and its beasts need to take their shares of the slaughter.
What animal instincts do they fear in me?