This horse swam so far out to sea that the water was 10m deep when they found him đ
WAIT IT GETS BETTER
When he got back on land, he still had enough energy to headbutt his trainers father hard enough to knock him unconscious. His trainer, Brad Smith, had this to say about the horse (ironically called Rebel Rover):
âHeâs not the type of horse to strike or kick, head-butting is more his go and he lined dad up and knocked him out cold.â
So this horse goes out and swims 11km in the ocean, has to get herded back in, and when he gets back on land is still energetic enough to knock someone out cold.
Now thatâs stamina!
âRebel Rover had only recently returning to racing after a ban in Victoria for misbehaving in the barriers.â (x)
this is literally no way to treat any animal, and itâs completely avoidable. Â
.5ppm+ ammonia is inexcusable – this betta was literally burning alive every second he was in that water – and itâs entirely from lack of care. Â not to mention his fins are literally rotting off and he is completely emaciated – this fish was not being fed.
for example, here is my completely healthy male dumbo eared betta, arwen:
his back has a nice curve outward to it, meaning he is a healthy weight. Â his stomach has a gentle swell, meaning he was fed recently and an appropriate amount for his size. Â he doesnât have fin rot, meaning his fins are not blackening and necrotic – literally rotting away.
for comparison, here is the doubletail male i got today:
both his back and stomach are sunken in – this betta is both emaciated and hasnât eaten in several days at least. Â his fins are necrotic and rotting away – he is quite literally decaying while still alive. Â he is also VERY pale – meaning he is stressed and sick. (NOTE: Â the healthy betta used as an example isnât a double tail – which means exactly what it sounds like. he only has one tail while the betta i got today has two)
this is a comparison between the two from above:
it was difficult to take a picture of arwen from above because a healthy betta is very unlikely to sit still when your hands are hovering above them – my betta would be excited and dancing around for food, because they are conditioned to associate my hands above them with eating. Â in general, a healthy betta isnât going to sit still for a picture. Â aside from that, i think itâs very apparent the difference between the two. Â arwenâs body is all gentle, healthy curves. his head isnât large in proportion to his body and it doesnât look weirdly disjointed from the rest of his body.
iâd normally post this to my fish blog, but i think itâs extremely important for people to really SEE this cruelty for what it is and understand just how easy it would be to provide proper care.
i donât suggest anyone ârescueâ a betta from petsmart or any other store- especially walmart.  that being said, i just couldnât leave him, he was belly up and i knew if i didnt take him no one else would – not like it would have mattered because i got him at closing and i know he wouldnt have survived the night had i not taken him. i also saw an opportunity for education – because i have 10k followers on this blog.
this is his new home. a clean, warm environment dosed with aquarium salt and stressguard(a fish antiseptic). Â i will have to monitor him closely for a while, change out his water daily and dose him with more antiseptic and aquarium salt.
this is the difference in just 5 hours
please, properly care for your animals, and dont support companies that donât.
I used to raise these guys. To see them kept badly and thoughtlessly is heartbreaking. And to see even one rescued from treatment like that is very, very good.
I know a lot of other people arenât having the easiest time either.
But, if youâre tempted to take out some frustrations through yelling in reblogs? Maybe especially if that doesnât have much to do with what the person you reblogged it from was actually saying? Please just stop a minute and think about what that might really accomplish. And if thatâs what youâre really aiming for.
Our surplus cheese is also why so many restaurants put so goddamn much of it into absolutely everything. A division of the federal government known as Dairy Management heavily promotes any restaurants that push cheesy menu items, even as the DoAâs Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion warns of the health risks associated with a cheese-heavy diet.
Basically the feds are conspiring to kill us all with dairy products because they got so buddy-buddy with the dairy industry in the first half of the 20th century that theyâve dug themselves into a hole and theyâre paying Big Dairy too much to back out now.
this is the best news ive heard all year
Oh God, this explains why itâs so hard to avoid cheese.
(Well, Iâm not in America, but I think our government has the same relationship with our dairy board.)
Okay, but Switzerland dealt with this problem by seriously pushing fondue.Â
Blogging this tweet because this explains SO MUCH about the mindset of pretty much all the folks Iâve known whoâre against single-payer, itâs not even funnyâŚ
ThisâŚ.
This never occurred to me. Not once. That Americans are against Health Care because they think it actually costs tens of thousands of dollars for a broken arm, hundreds of thousands for a complicated birth, millions for cancer treatment.
Because theyâve never known anything different. The idea that a broken arm is only a couple hundred bucks; a complicated birth a couple thousand; cancer treatment only tens of thousands; all easily covered by existing tax structures.
This explains a lot. Â And itâs a good example of what I was talking about in my post on scarcity being used to prop up ableism â always question the idea that a resource is genuinely scarce. Â Even if it seems obvious that it is, quite often thatâs the result of careful manipulation and misconceptions that youâre not even aware of. Â
And never think youâre too smart to be fooled by that kind of thing, it doesnât work like that. Â Similarly, donât think people who are fooled by something are stupid. Â Nobody can have all the information about everything, and nobody has the time and energy to investigate and put together conscious conclusions about every piece of information theyâre given. Â It doesnât take being stupid, or even just gullible, to believe something like this.
I currently live in a country without free medical care and still, itâs enormously cheap compared to the USA. An American expat wrote a piece for our English language paper about how she paid more for parking at the hospital than giving birth to her baby thatâs pretty interesting:
If price fixing was actually enforced against medical providersâŚ
If this is difficult to assimilate, consider the humble aspirin. There are no aspirins on Earth that are worth the money that USA hospitals charge. Aspirin – a simple cheap form of salicylic acid – is worth less than pennies and the formulation doesnât vary. You can buy packets of aspirin for less than a dollar and a lot of that is packaging. In market value, individual aspirins are worth fractions of cents. Hospitals in the USA will make a spirited attempt to charge you wild amounts for them. Ten dollars apiece! Twenty dollars? Thirty? Who knows! Hurray!
I ⌠did not realize this
I do need to add here that part of the reason medications cost so much more in hospitals is because the cost includes helping to pay for the people preparing (the pharmacy staff) and administering them. It may sound like giving an aspirin to a patient isnât a big deal, but it actually is, because aspirin is generally used these days as an anticoagulant rather than as a pain reliever.
Which isnât to say that drugs arenât massively over-priced here in general. They are. But part of not having universal health care means paying out a lot of money to coders and billers, which takes money away from things like nursing care, which is way more important. Seriously, one of the biggest issues that we have here is how many people and how much money we have to spend to deal with the byzantine craziness that is all the different insurance companiesânegotiating with them, following their guidelines for what they will & wonât pay for, etc. The money to pay nursing staff (and the patient care techs, the pharmacy techs, etc.) has to come from somewhere, and itâs the nurses who, with a lot of care and skill and background knowledge, administer the medications to the patients.
Oh see in the NHS, the nurses just cast a spell to materialize the aspirins from raw fundament, already in a little paper cup, and we pay them in acorns that we leave under toadstools.
Sorry, that was uncalled for, I just liked the mental image.
So we are actually agreeing with each other, I think you possibly got confused (probably my fault) and took a different angle.
Letâs say that the cost of making a burger is $5, and a restaurant burger costs $15. Everyone says, âhey, thatâs pretty fair. Five dollars goes for the burger, five for restaurant overheads – salaries and electricity and decor and so on – and five for the restaurant to make a profit.â
In the UK, they said âokay, weâve decided that burgers are a human right, not something you should squeeze profit from. We will charge $10 for a burger. Thatâs the cost of the ingredients, plus the admin fees of making and serving it and so on. Itâs a nonprofit, a National Burger Service. but you can still pay $15 for a private one at a premium restaurant if you choose.â
America looked at that and said âburgers are $45.â
âEr, could you show your math?â Everyone asked, except they probably said âmaths.â
âYes. $5 for the ingredients, $5 for salaries and electricities and the restaurant decor and whatnot. $20 for profit. And another $15 to collect the profit.â
Everyone else says âhuh, how ⌠interesting!â And continue to provide their citizens with $10 burgers, which somehow functions.
So then some American citizens say âoh, we like the look of the UKâs National Burger Service. Should we do that too?â
And America goes, âwhat, suddenly you can afford to hand out $45 burgers to every random fucker you know? Burgers are $45, you fools.â
And the citizens say âoh, youâre right, that sounds expensive, sorry. Letâs not do that.â
And this thread, including Elodie, says, âby the way – burgers themselves, as burgers, are worth more in the $10 range, which is what other countries charge.â
And youâre like âNO ELODIE BURGERS ARE $45 BECAUSE YOU NEED TO PAY FOR THE CARPETS, AND THE BURGER BILLING DEPARTMENT, AND THE COLLECTIONS AGENCIES, OTHERWISE HOW WILL WE PAY THE POOR SERVERS?.â
But that is not QUITE what we are talking about. Healthcare costs in countries with socialised medicine do not include the paying for the cost of the salaries of the billing departments because billing doesnât work that way under socialised medicine.
So one way we could start working towards that is by saying âthe $10 burger is possible, and indeed it is practiced in many economies.â Then, I think, people will feel more relaxed about it, and will start to consider it without panicking.
I would rather let a âspecial snowflakeâ into the autistic community than exclude an autistic that needs support and cannot get a clinical diagnosis.
I would rather validate ten âspecial snowflakesâ than invalidate one autistic who needs support and cannot get a clinical diagnosis.
I would rather welcome a hundred âspecial snowflakesâ without question than force an autistic to disclose their entire life to me just to get the support they need when they cannot get a clinical diagnosis.
I would rather help those that donât need help, than deny help to those that need it.
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