![]() I left a short comment on the Princetonian's article, and hope others will do the same. ![]() I did a online search and discovered that there several videos on YouTube showing these and other "squirrel launchers" or "squirrel catapults." Of course, the videos don't show the aftermath, the squirrels dead or dying with broken bones and internal injuries. You can use the link above to view the Daily Princetonian article. I would not want to risk gratifying the sick people who made the videos. In all three of the videos the squirrels were clearly lured onto the devices with food.įor obvious reasons, I am not showing the. gif the camera is at an angle where you can see the squirrel flying high into the air and then plummeting back to earth. The slingshots in the second and third of the short videos look powerful enough that the squirrels were most likely injured or killed. gif files show squirrels being hurled into the air by homemade squirrel catapult or slingshot devices. The end of the article takes a disturbingly dark turn. Shoemake also explains that during the recent winter vacation, squirrels got into her room and "trashed" it. gifs were taken from viral videos, such as one in which a squirrel jumps on and wakes up a panda, and one where a squirrel is startled when it bursts a hanging water balloon. gif files with short allegedly humorous comments under them, illustrating reasons why the author does not like squirrels. This Monday, a blog called The Prox, on the paper's website, ran an article by Rebekah Shoemake titled "10 Reasons Squirrels Are The Worst." The post consists mostly of a series of. The staff of Princeton University's daily student-run newspaper apparently thinks cruelty to animals is fair game for comedy.
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