<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 1/22/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Damien Broderick</b> <<a href="mailto:thespike@satx.rr.com">thespike@satx.rr.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
At 11:27 AM 1/22/2006 -0600, Brian Atkins wrote:<br><br>>I think he brought that up somewhere and proposed the idea that greater<br>>intelligence also may create additional risks for the species that did not<br>>exist prior to that point. In other words, global catastrophic risks,
<br>>which the upcoming book is exactly about. Some of those risks might wipe<br>>out humans, but leave bacteria - so which species had better survivability<br>>in the _long run_?<br><br> From THE ONION:<br><br>
Maverick Hunter's 'Human Beings As Prey' Plan Not As Challenging As<br>Expected<br><br> January 17, 2006 | Issue 42?03<br><br>PERIL ISLAND?Big-game hunter Baron Hugo von Urwitz conceded Tuesday<br>that his theory that human beings are the most cunning and challenging
<br>of quarry is seriously flawed.<br><br>"Perhaps I gave my fellow man too much credit," said von Urwitz,<br>looking on as his servants carried three lifeless human beings bound to<br>poles by their hands and ankles. "Admittedly, there are fewer kills
<br>today than yesterday, but only because the herd is thinning."<br><br> Bored with netting such elusive and dangerous prey as Bengal tigers,<br>white rhinos, and Cape buffalo, the 51-year-old adventurer said he had
<br>thought it would be "capital sport" to hunt humans on his uncharted,<br>densely forested private island.<br><br> "My huntsman's heart thrilled at the prospect of bringing down a live<br>human, who alone in the animal kingdom has the capacity to outwit and
<br>even best his enemies through sheer intellect," von Urwitz said. "What<br>I neglected to consider is that man is also alone in the capacity to<br>tumble straight into quicksand while fleeing from a swarm of yellow
<br>jackets after trying to steal honey from their nest."<br><br>Von Urwitz chanced upon his stock of prey Saturday, after a chartered<br>luxury yacht ran aground in the shoals surrounding his island. The<br>yacht's 29 passengers and five crew members were promptly invited to
<br>lodge in the baron's imposing fortress.<br><br> At dawn Sunday, von Urwitz roused his guests to announce his shocking<br>intent to hunt them. Allowing them only small knives and the clothes on<br>their backs, he anticipated that his human prey would elude him in
<br>inventive and clever ways?and perhaps even make their hunter the hunted<br>himself.<br><br> Yet in the first night alone, eight tourists died of exposure.<br><br>"I'm not sure I even need to be here, really," von Urwitz added.
<br><br> "At the very least, I assumed they would take to the trees and hills<br>in desperate flight," he said. "Instead, many of them just milled about<br>like peahens within the confines of my estate, periodically rattling
<br>the backdoor knob to ensure that it hadn't been unlocked since they<br>last checked."<br><br>The baron theorized that the grave danger simply didn't register with<br>most of the humans. "Look at this one," von Urwitz said, as a cellar
<br>meat locker revealed an overweight, middle-aged male bearing a single<br>gunshot wound to the forehead. "I bagged him in the courtyard as he<br>sipped vitamin water, after I had given him a four-hour running start.
<br>Where's the sport in this?"<br><br>Von Urwitz said three vacationers brazenly approached him with strange<br>questions.<br><br> "They asked about grand prizes and something they called an 'immunity<br>challenge,'" von Urwitz said. "I had my men slit their throats."
<br><br>Those who had the wherewithal to hide did so in obvious places, such as<br>in the toolshed, under the car, or behind bushes. Von Urwitz said his<br>hounds "made short work of them."<br><br> A few did flee to the jungle, including one man who raced in the
<br>direction of a pit trap dug by von Urwitz's men. From a hunting blind<br>close to the trap, von Urwitz said he watched with "immense<br>excitement."<br><br> "Would [the man's] eyes catch the carpet of dead, flattened leaves in
<br>the clearing, noticing their rather unnatural distribution, and quickly<br>surmise, through reason and intuition alike, that something was<br>dreadfully amiss?" von Urwitz said. "Or would he blindly stumble into
<br>the pit and be finished off by our arrows?"<br><br>Ultimately, the man did neither. Before coming within 20 yards of the<br>pit, he was knocked cold by a low-hanging tree limb.<br><br>With 22 kills by nightfall Tuesday, the baron recognized the need to
<br>amend his strategy. "I had snared a couple of tourists, but they were<br>so obviously feebleminded that I threw them back into the brush," von<br>Urwitz said. "If I leave them alone, perhaps in a few weeks one or two
<br>of them will have developed survival tactics besides uncontrolled<br>weeping and involuntary defecation."<br><br>Hinting that his ruthlessness was quickly turning to pity for the<br>pathetic, fragile creatures, von Urwitz also mused about rounding them
<br>up in an island game preserve. "I am reminded of Theodore Roosevelt,<br>with his hunter's love of nature," von Urwitz said. "Perhaps future<br>generations of von Urwitzes can enjoy the humans' comical antics, and
<br>if their numbers increase sufficiently, perhaps hunt some of the?one<br>would hope?increasingly fit adults from time to time."<br><br>"On the other hand, I could always put out some large glue traps," von
<br>Urwitz added.<br></blockquote></div><br>
Problem is, Hollywood always has von Urwitz select Arnold Schwatzenegger or Claude van Damme to be the prey. <br>
Big mistake.<br>
<br>
OTOH, some US survivalist nuts or British SAS men might provide more sport.<br>
<br>
Dirk<br>