Be passenger pigeon

>Be passenger pigeon
>BILLIONS of birds in North America
>mutt appears on the continent
>"Mmmm, McNuggets in the sky"
>100 years pass and the passenger pigeon goes extinct
Why do Amerimutts criticize the Chinese and their eating habits when mutts literally ate North America's most populous bird into extinction in less than a century?

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squab
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horses_in_the_United_States
twitter.com/AnonBabble

Because you don't get airborne AIDS from eating a bird.

The american indians killed off the elephants.

and horses

And Giant forrest buffalo.

There were no horses till Europeans showed up.

And why were there no horses in North America before Europeans? Because they were hunted to extinction.

P.F. Chang Cope

proofs

Lmao. You fuckin illiterate. There were no humans until 12000 years ago.

No horses nor related animals were ever present in the new world. Outside of Mexico city and andrean peru, no humans to " hunt to extinction " non existent animals.

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Please link this information.

>Chinks are at the stage Burgers were 150 years ago so you can't criticize them
OP, as always, is a faggot

Americans eat pigeons? Don't make me google this.

>there were no humans until 12000 years ago

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Yeah, it's called squab

Hell yeah, it's called squab. It's more a rural American type thing.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squab

150 years ago, yeah. Burgers were very hard to come by in those times

Extinct? I see those all the time. Is this a projection or something?

Because we never cooked them alive or ate them alive, like the chinks do.

guess you never heard of patagonia

Its called squab.You can find it in fancy restaurants.

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the person you are replying to has a very small brain. i am apologizing for his retardedness he should have been given the rope

Cats once again prove to be giant faggots.

>It's more a rural American type thing.
Rural American here.
I don't know anyone that eats pigeons.
Not enough meat on them.

pick up a book not published after 1945 you fucking retard

A lot of people like to hunt doves. They're essentially the same species.

>Extinct? I see those all the time. Is this a projection or something?
That specific subspecies is extinct, but there are pigeons all over the place.
I don't know why that particular type of pigeon was so hunted, why not your average city-dwelling pigeon, or doves, that are the pigeon's far more stupid cousins.

>I see those all the time.
meth: not even once.

maybe because of the lack of meat and bad taste do you have any ability to think for youself or does your immigrant mind not work that fast holy shit neck yourself

FFFFFF.

>Passenger pigeons were shot with such ease that many did not consider them to be a game bird, as an amateur hunter could easily bring down six with one shotgun blast; a particularly good shot with both barrels of a shotgun at a roost could kill 61 birds.
>In the latter half of the 19th century, thousands of passenger pigeons were captured for use in the sports shooting industry. The pigeons were used as living targets in shooting tournaments, such as "trap-shooting", the controlled release of birds from special traps.
>The pigeon was considered so numerous that 30,000 birds had to be killed to claim the prize in one competition.
>Nets were propped up to allow passenger pigeons entry, then closed by knocking loose the stick that supported the opening, trapping twenty or more pigeons inside.[126] Tunnel nets were also used to great effect, and one particularly large net was capable of catching 3,500 pigeons at a time.
>Decoy or "stool pigeons" (sometimes blinded by having their eyelids sewn together) were tied to a stool. When a flock of pigeons passed by, a cord would be pulled that made the stool pigeon flutter to the ground, making it seem as if it had found food, and the flock would be lured into the trap.
>A severe method was to set fire to the base of a tree nested with pigeons; the adults would flee and the juveniles would fall to the ground.[133][134] Sulfur was sometimes burned beneath the nesting tree to suffocate the birds, which fell out of the tree in a weakened state.
>By the mid-19th century, railroads had opened new opportunities for pigeon hunters. While previously it had proved too difficult to ship masses of pigeons to eastern cities, the access provided by the railroad permitted pigeon hunting to become commercialized.
>Pigeons were caught in such numbers that by 1876, shipments of dead pigeons were unable to recoup the costs of the barrels and ice needed to ship them.

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You can just cut the breast out of pigeons and they taste great.

Horses Evolved in North America

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horses_in_the_United_States

The Spaniards found no horses in Mexico, Central America or Peru, and from that they deduced that there were no horses on the American continent.
Sir Francis Drake, visiting the west coast of North America, claimed he saw “large bands of wild horses.”

>So far as the nonexistence of the horse in ancient America is concerned, the question has forever been set at rest by the discovery of the remains of this animal all over the land; and though Cortez and his followers saw none alive, yet Admiral Sir Francis Drake did see large bands of wild horses on the Oregon coast in 1579, far too early for any to have escaped from the Spaniards, grown wild, and traveled so vast a distance: (Reynolds and Sjodal, Commentary on the Book of Mormon, Vol. 6, p.236).There has been work performed at Gypsum Cave and other locations ‘where mammoth, mastodon, camel and horse with man, and there is a map showing twenty-three places where extinct animals have been associated with man in the United States.’ (M.R. Harrington, Gypsum Cave, Nevada, “Southwest Museum Papers.” Nol 8,37).

In the Museum of Natural History in Buenos Aries, Argentina, is the skeleton of a prehistoric horse, discovered in that area by Charles Darwin, that was indistinguishable from the modern horse except for the nose bone that was about 10 inches long, whereas in the modern horse the nose bone is only about four inches long.

>he's never been on a dove hunt

Yea, but let's be honest, that's just target shooting.

I've seen one with those exact patterns, beak shape, etc in the Caribbean. Very often.

Hmm. Wonder if Drake was mistaking the horse for something else?

Doves are related to pigeons, but are not pigeons.
They are also infinitely more stupid than pigeons...or just about anything else...