Don't get me wrong, HHV was the last legitimate transaction, but I didn't say that blaming them. They don't keep our information anyway, so if someone got hacked it would have been their processor, not them.
Understood.
Don't get me wrong, HHV was the last legitimate transaction, but I didn't say that blaming them. They don't keep our information anyway, so if someone got hacked it would have been their processor, not them.
Don't get me wrong, HHV was the last legitimate transaction, but I didn't say that blaming them. They don't keep our information anyway, so if someone got hacked it would have been their processor, not them.

Well for the first time ever in my life, I got hit with fraudulent charges.
Just to clarify (not that anyone cares, except perhaps the Maestro) I do not dispute the necessity of killing man-eating lions. We are the apex creature on this planet, so when we are threatened, we destroy the threat.
However, if killing lions is justified by lions killing humans, it is not to be celebrated in my opinion. These are amazing creatures who represent the top of feline evolution. They are the only social cats, they have pronounced sexual dimorphism, and are apex predators wherever they live. No other creature on earth can compete with hyenas as top predator. Their population has plummeted in the last 20 years. It is not known why, but it is generally suspected that loss of habitat is one issue.
My personal opinion is that the intentional hunting of the finest male specimens by poachers has done more to decimate the population of lions than loss of habitat, which is comparatively well maintained. Frequently the strongest and most spectacular males are killed, which results in an unprotected pride for a time. When a new male lion comes in to take over this pride, he will almost always kill any cubs that are under a year old. He does this so his lionesses will go into heat, so he can produce his own cubs. Now this new lion is generally weaker than the old Pride Male (or the pride would already be his) so not only does the species lose one spectacular male, frequently his line is destroyed forever. Imagine if poachers work the same territory annually. It is quite probable that a pride will go without reproduction for generations due to this abhorrent practice, and that only the weaker lions will survive since they are not prime targets of these brave hunters. This dilutes and weakens the species, all so some Johnny Safari can have a stuffed head on his wall.
For this reason, I take pass on celebrating some made-up hero defending mankind from a couple of rogue lions, when we are on the verge of destroying this amazing and majestic creature. I know this is my pet crusade and I do not expect you all to share it, but I do want to explain why I despise that movie.
Oh, and I actually liked, "Lost in Translation". And not just because of Scarlett and her beautiful Johanssens....
Well for the first time ever in my life, I got hit with fraudulent charges.
Not that big a deal, they said I wasn't responsible for any of the charges and they'd just send me a new card.
Don't get the wrong idea about me, Lion. I think you and I are on the same wavelength, just walking on parallel paths. My love for the great cats goes well into my childhood and although I am partial to the Tiger and Leopard over the Lions (perhaps just from being from India), I absolutely despise what is happening to the last remnants of these species in whatever country that it may be happening. The British damn near wiped out the Tiger and Leopard populations in India in the span of less than 100 years, all in the name of sport.
Nothing gets my blood boiling more than when I see vintage photographic footage of 20 or 30 hunters posing with the bodies of Tigers and Leopards laid out before them, only to eventually end up gracing the walls or floors of their mansions.
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I have spent many a night in the jungles of India listening to the call of the wild, and regret that coming generations will not be able to share in the beauty of watching a mother lead her furtive cubs to a watering hole, or to patiently teach them the art of stalking their prey.
The only plus side is that we as humans have for the most part come to the realization that this senseless slaughter cannot continue, and are taking steps to protect these animals. My fear stems from what you have alluded to, Are we perhaps already too late?!

I'm not as much worried about the Leopard either. Their stealth IS their largest advantage. I read and own books by an English author Jim Corbett, who now has a National Park in India dedicated to him, who wrote about a Leopard that took out a Bullock that was plodding along at night pulling a cart. The cart driver did not know that his Bullock was killed until it just collapsed in front of him. Never saw it happen!!
From Wikipedia:
Edward James "Jim" Corbett (25 July 1875 in Nainital, India – 19 April 1955 in Nyeri, Kenya) was a legendary British hunter and tracker-turned-conservationist, author and naturalist, famous for hunting a large number of man-eaters in India.
Corbett held the rank of colonel in the British Indian Army and was frequently called upon by the government of the United Provinces, now the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, to kill man-eating tigers and leopards that were preying on people in the nearby villages of the Garhwal and Kumaon regions. His hunting successes earned him a long-held respect and fame amongst the people residing in the villages of Kumaon. Some even claim that he was considered to be a sadhu (saint) by the locals.
Corbett was an avid photographer and after his retirement, authored the Man-Eaters of Kumaon, Jungle Lore, and other books recounting his hunts and experiences, which enjoyed much critical acclaim and commercial success. Later on in life, Corbett spoke out for the need to protect India's wildlife from extermination and played a key role in creating a national reserve for the endangered Bengal tiger by using his influence to persuade the provincial government to establish it. The national park was renamed Jim Corbett National Park in his honour in 1957 after his death in 1955.
Surely not the documentary the Lion mentioned, but I'm gonna watch it -