This whole thing about eating cats and dogs has stirred up a hornet’s nest. People are writing in that their pets have vanished recently, while others are saying this was the outcome following the Vietnam War, where people were missing pets, and they were eating squirrels, ducks, and dogs in San Francisco. That was even reported in the New York Times. These people also led to demands to shut the border. History repeats, for human nature never changes. But this time, Biden opened the border to flood in millions of aliens to alter the vote in 2024, as I encountered with Australia when I tried to negotiate for Hong Kong back in 1997.
The New York Times had no problem reporting the truth in 1982. What has happened to ABC, NBC, CBS, NBC, CNN, and all the newspapers? They have abandoned America, trashed the Freedom of the Press principle, and become cheerleaders for the destruction of the United States, all of Western Society, and our culture. CNN wants to create World War III in hopes that they will return to #1 as they were during the Iraq War.
Every so often a news report rereminds us that sizable communities Vietnam War refugees now in America brought with them customs that war with American law.
In 1980 Southeast Asian refugees were reported poaching and eating squirrels, ducks and dogs in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park.
With their old world hunting and trapping skills, they were attempting to carry on the way of life they had known, in a place they did not know.
In 1981, a similar problem confounded wildlife authorities in Utah. Vietnamese, Cambodian, and Laotian refugees were poaching deer, porcupines, skunks, doves, woodpeckers, robins, baby birds, duck eggs and fish. Officials translated state game laws into the refugee languages and even put on slide shows, to no avail.
Now comes news from Seattle that Laotian Hmong refugees have been growing opium poppies in their vegetable gardens. Someone asked the police to identify the bright red flowers. Seattle police found more than 4000 Papaver somniferum.
Vietnam remains with us, in odd and unpredicted ways.