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lunes, 3 de noviembre de 2014

RARE BIRD EGGS TRAFFICKING IN SCANDINAVIA

Source: rspb.


By Gundhramns Hammer
November 3, 2014

Humans are special. Yeah!... Especially maniac, that is! For example, some people have the mania for human skeletons to travel the infinite space to reach the Orgasmus Galaxy (Fig. 1). 


Figure 1. The loving human skeleton: Swedish woman´s lover. Source: The Local.



Others have the mania for eggs.  

But not just any eggs. They go for the rare bird eggs. And this anti-biospherical egg collecting can have a tremendous negative impact on bird populations. 

Since people are always trying to get the most with the least effort, it is not surprising to find that many people employ short cuts to get the most money out of their efforts. 

This may mean going narco or, in the case of taking the wildlife trafficking route, going after the rare species to cash them in the black market, with collectors including rare bird egg maniacs as secret members of the wildlife gang at the end of this fucking chain.

And secret rare egg traffickers do not give a fuck about borders. 

Some countries are hit hard by these egg maniacs.

Even those countries where the press works fucking hard to keep their image saintly are on the mafia list. 

But no country ain´t saintly. 

If they are painted so by the press, it is because the laundry work has already been done somewhere else, further down, and they only get the crispy dry cleaned clothes.

Thus, in "saintly" Scandinavia not all is glory. Not all is quiet.

There is mafia in the Scandinavian countries too. But it is quite sophisticated, sort of quiet and well camouflaged, of course.

In Scandinavia, the rare bird egg mafia was recently hit fucking hard by the law. 


10.000 eggs seized in Finland

In 2012,  the Finnish customs police seized 10.000 eggs of rare bird species from the hands of wildlife traffickers. 

"Officers seized the eggs along with some 300 dead birds, some of which were stuffed and some frozen from a man resident in Österbotten in central Finland.", reported The Local - Sweden´s News in English.
 
Read the full story: Click HERE or HERE.

And this is only the tip of the iceberg.
 

As you can see, not everything that shines is gold!


See you later alligators!

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