The Boston Globe

Editorial

editorial

Road kill exposes violent tendencies

It’s a piece of advice so basic — not to mention humane — it seems unnecessary to point out, but if you happen to find yourself driving down the road and see a turtle crossing into the lane, don’t swerve to intentionally run it over. While that sounds obvious, it may not be to some people. While conducting an experiment to figure out how to make turtles safer while they cross the road, a college student in Clemson, S.C., discovered that one of the most significant dangers facing turtles is mean-spirited drivers who run them over on purpose. In his experiment, seven of 267 drivers hit a realistic rubber reptile intentionally.

The student’s findings weren’t surprising to Hal Herzog, a Western Carolina University psychology professor and author of a book about humans’ relationships with animals. When he asked 110 students if they had ever intentionally run over a turtle, he said about 34 students raised their hands. Both experiences support an informal study conducted earlier this year by NASA engineer Mark Rober, who observed 6 percent of 1,000 drivers swerve out of their lane just to squash an animal.

Comments

It's actually OK to indiscriminately kill animals. Man's dominion over nature, something to that effect, it's in the Bible. 

Replies

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With all those "dislike"'s, Giermund, I think a few people took your comment seriously. Or maybe they were the kind of people you were referring to.

I'm actually quite surprized there aren't more comments in support of killing animals indiscriminantly because we also have a goodsized segment of the population that would do that to People if they got the chance.

I've read that it's common for serial killers of human beings to have begun their "career" by killing, torturing, or mutilating animals, sometimes neighborhood pets.