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<blockquote data-quote="ollie989898" data-source="post: 7099802" data-attributes="member: 54866"><p>There is plenty of youtube footage of wildcats and other predators taking family pets as a snack in the dead of night. Happens around the world with alarming regularity.</p><p></p><p>The assumption seems to be that these big predators avoid man completely. That is not the case as many people in North America will attest to. When times turn tough, they actually become drawn to humans and their locale. This is even found in places like India where big cats are not hard to spot near human settlements and they have even attacked people. The idea that some recently released predator is never going to find itself in proximity to man is foolhardy as it will invariably result in them being shot due to the danger/nuisance they cause.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ollie989898, post: 7099802, member: 54866"] There is plenty of youtube footage of wildcats and other predators taking family pets as a snack in the dead of night. Happens around the world with alarming regularity. The assumption seems to be that these big predators avoid man completely. That is not the case as many people in North America will attest to. When times turn tough, they actually become drawn to humans and their locale. This is even found in places like India where big cats are not hard to spot near human settlements and they have even attacked people. The idea that some recently released predator is never going to find itself in proximity to man is foolhardy as it will invariably result in them being shot due to the danger/nuisance they cause. [/QUOTE]
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