The poor mistreated dorp; running away from his cuddly, lovable, beautiful, sweet, and feathered attackers. I am absolutely terrified (cough) not.
BOO!
I scared you didn't I, dorp?



Michael wrote:I already sent you a PM about this:It is generally considered bad etiquette to multi-post back to back responses on a forum thread. Instead, try to post all the responses as a single reply with multiple quotes. You may not have known this, but you can quote a bunch of different people in the same response.
When you click reply to a topic and get to the reply box, scroll below this. You will see a list of recent posts on the topic. You can click "quote" next to each one you want to quote and it will paste the quote into your response area. It's also a good idea to remove all extra text in your quote besides the specific points you are referring to. Otherwise the response gets very long and redundant with complete reposts of other posts.
If you realize you forgot to mention something in your response immediately after, instead of adding another reply, you can go back and edit your post. On the other hand, if more than about 15 minutes has gone by, don't edit your post because people may have already read your response and not realize you added more to it since.
With over 15 posts in a row, it is absolutely ridiculous. It is unfair to other members to have the thread entirely hijacked by a single member. There isn't really a limit to how much you can post in a single response, but posting so many responses makes it difficult for other members to be involved in the discussion.

dorp wrote:The euthanasia part was because she would't want her parrot to be re-homed or something as she knows how volatile that creature is but I explained to her that the parrot would forget about her almost instantly and find a new 'mate' or whatever but she didn't seem to believe me.

liz wrote:Michael wrote:GlassOnion wrote:Birds (haha?!) don't have emotions? You're going by old school stories. Humans have been advancing in our intellect and in debunking myths. If mankind still lived by archaic tales and never thrived for new information, we'd all be doomed.
There is conclusive scientific evidence after a 30yr research that parrots have the intelligence of a 5 year old human child.
Do 5 year old human children have emotions, yes or no?
Sorry but this is completely wrong. What you presented is a logical fallacy. Just because the Alex studies found that Grey Parrots can demonstrate understanding concepts akin to a 5 year old human child, and that 5 year olds have emotions, does not in any way imply that parrots have to have emotion. Just because Alex was able to count, add, identify shapes, etc does not all prove any kind of emotion whatsoever.
There is no proof that parrots or any animals for that matter have emotions. Heck human emotions aren't well understood in the first place. Behavior can be observed, studied, reproduced, and understood. Emotions are highly subjective. Virtually all talk of animals + emotions are nothing more than projection and anthropomorphism. It gets us nowhere in terms of better understanding/interacting with our pets.
They can feel fear. They can feel sorrow at a lose. They feel happiness when they play. I TRULY BELIEVE THAT THEY FEEL LOVE. If no one else believes this way then I have been dancing in the wrong ballroom.




dorp wrote:we're back together and now I'm choosing to never go to her house again
forgetting about the parrots in general has been helpful


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