Uncyclopedia:Imperial Colonization/Dinosaur

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The annual "feed the orphans" Vietnam campaign is often given accolades by environmentalists. As seen here two orphans give "sporting chase" to their dinner (pity the poor photographers who get in their way).

Dinosaurs have become a major media sensation because of human civilization's increased destruction of their habitat. When the jungles, prairies, forests, and other prime dinosaur ecological communities are destroyed, these noble creatures have to come into cities and towns to search for food and shelter. Humans have always lived in peace with the tinier feathered dinosaurs, and until now the larger dinosaurs were naturally skittish and avoided humans. Due to environmental destruction, this is now proving increasingly difficult, and the bigger specimens no longer keep to themselves.

Dinosaur history[edit]

Dinosaurs have roamed the earth and mastered the sky for over six hundred million years (give or take tens of millions). The various species carved out niches and lived either side by side in peace with each other or, in the case of the predators, roamed at will through their territories in search of prey. Having survived many close calls which would have devastated the dinosaur population, including what astrophysicists call several large "missed by just a whisker" asteroid strikes. The relentless nature of these noble creatures was unchecked until the most intelligent of mammals--Homo sapiens--came down from the trees and moved onto the plains.

Habitat and diet[edit]

Fishermen like to feed dinosaurs their unwantedfresh kills, so a few can always be found down by the docks.

When humans evolved six thousand years ago from smaller mammals and quickly learned how to make fire, speak in understandable grunts, and build pyramids and cave dwellings, dinosaurs generally ignored them. Even as recently as fifty years ago, no one could have predicted the emergence of the industrial age, the subsequent growth of cities, and the mass devastation of dinosaur habitat. Now the two life forms have been forced to get along together, and this has led to new experiences for both species.

Due to deforestation, dinosaurs had less and less of their natural habitat in which to stop slowly in. This led them to suddenly run out of the forest and look around, which led to the increased urbanization of dinosaurs. This increased the breadth of their diet as well, as now dogs, possums, and leftovers come into play.

In fact, many people have started to put out treats for dinosaurs. Piles of leaves can be found in the fall, carefully gathered from lawns and placed in the street by the curb. Dinosaurs eat these buffets as if leaves are going out of style. And many people are leaving their dead relatives and pets on the curbs to happily see them skinned, deboned, and devoured within minutes. As an added benefit, dinosaurs are clean eaters, and, like raccoons, wash their food if they can. Backyard swimming pools suddenly take on a new look when raccoons and dinosaurs compete to see who can clean their food the quickest. Dinosaurs usually win because, before long, they are cleaning the raccoons!


Dinosaurs among us[edit]

Dinosaurs have a very distinctive camouflage that makes them nearly impossible to find. I bet you can't find the dinosaurs in this picture.

All types of miniature dinosaurs, or "dinos", have been brought into our cities, towns and homes for labor or companionship, but primarily for dino labor. Many of these dinos have replaced the saber tooth cat, or Merychippus, and joined the family unit as welcomed substitutions for traditional pets. This is due to their friendly nature and lower housing costs. Many of the tiniest flesh-devouring subjects are carried in purses or knapsacks as conversation pieces, and are taken to posh diner-parties or outdoor meals to be fed directly from plates and to make cleanup a snap!

There was, however, one incident in Tokyo in early 2011 where the dino mistook the owner's hand for the table scraps, and, unfortunately, devoured it. Adding insult to injury, the bill for that night's meal was over five hundred yen. That incident was of course nothing compared to the one that occurred in Chicago the summer of 1994. The dino ate a man's whole arm, and the bill was seven hundred dollars.

Hunting[edit]

Poachers attacking en masse; a tactic use by bullies and cowards. Pick on somebody your own size why don't you!

Dinosaur poaching has marred human-dinosaur relations to the extent that most nations have instituted the death penalty for those caught red-handed (literally; they have to be caught with dinosaur blood on their hands, which is why most poachers wear gloves).

The outlawing of dinosaur hunting, including all small dinos such as wild turkeys, geese, ducks, crows and baby sun bees, has eased most hostilities between humans and dinos, but the poaching problem still raises its ugly head. Der Internationale Anschluss des Pochierens (in Japanese 国际偷猎者联合) or International Poachers Union insists that its members simply cannot afford food[1], and lack sufficient intelligence to grow it themselves, so they must, "take the beasties down". Anti-poaching hippies, including United Nations Secretary General Wildflower Sunshine, have passed so many laws protecting dinosaurs that entire conferences have been held to think up at least one more new anti-poaching law, to no avail. (By comparison, the United States has at least 47 government agencies that are responsible for stopping dinosaur hunting, and at least 43 that support it). Their next target: Gloves.

Theme parks[edit]

Fire show at 5, 8 and 10.

Known as the "Happiest Place on Earth," Dinoland has been entertaining children for several years now. Smaller dinos have volunteered to be trained to play putt-putt golf, ride the bumper cars, and chase entire families as they come down the chute on the waterslide. Nobody can hold a candle to the smile that a well-placed dinosaur puts on the face of your child!

The two Dinolands--situated in easily accessible Paris, France, and Toronto, Canada--have spurred imitators as far away as Peru (although these faux attractions have no dinosaurs, they do have several foam facsimiles expertly manipulated to chase families down the waterslides). Only recently have the dinosaurs demanded union representation, and this has caused several work stoppages, very loud picket lines, and the unfortunate loss of several management negotiators.

But when all is well and the sun is shining, there is nowhere children would rather be than rubbing the belly of a dinosaur for luck and giving chase to their siblings from atop a triceratops.

PETA[edit]

PETA's Velociraptor Awareness Day, highlighted by its Million-Dino March on the United Nations, threw light on both the mistreatment of raptors and inadvertently on the inner organs of its human participants.

Founded specifically to protect large dinosaurs, PETA (People for Ethical T-Rex Assistance) has recently turned its formidable publicity machine to make sure smaller dinosaurs are also treated fairly. "After all," said PETA spokesperson Bess T. Ality,[2] “scientists all agree that birds are dinosaurs. Really, there's not much difference between a Tyrannosaurus rex and a hummingbird, is there?"

In 2008, PETA organized a campaign to assure that Triceratops were given the right, though United Nations General Assembly resolution, to eat leaves when and where they wanted to, without human interference. Herds of the gentle giants, some with neighborhood children cheerfully riding atop their head shields, began to populate parks and arboretums, cutting the grass and

Dead tree.jpg
pruning

the trees as effectively as a crew of migrant workers with sick children back home and nary a peso in their pocket.

Less successful for the cause was the misnamed "World Naked T-Rex Ride" held in spring of 2010. The original concept was for protesters to travel through cities across the world while riding naked Tyrannosaurus rexes. But PETA considered the idea to be cruelty to animals and the group lacked funds to sponsor an international event, so the plan was changed. Instead, the organization used hundreds of women who ran naked through the streets of London. The campaign was intended to put the focus on dinosaur rights, or, as some observers believed, the "Birds Be Free"[3] campaign. But unfortunately, spectators instead focused on the hundreds of women running naked through the streets of London.

PETA continued to expand its focus to include the plight of hundreds of other naked dinosaur species. The group has stood at the forefront of granting freedom and peaceful coexistence to our roaring, rampaging, and carnivorous brothers and sisters.

Unfortunately, the organization suffered some failures. Several people were reported missing after last year's Velociraptor Awareness Day and Million-Dino March. And the group's headquarters’ suffered severe damage and several members were reported missing after their ill-advised Bring-A-Dino-To-Work Day. Bess T. Ality said, "Next year we'll change two things; first, make sure we don't try to lead the 13-foot tall T-Rexes through six-foot high doorways; and second, make sure they eat before we bring them in. Perhaps next time we'll add some tomatoes to the carnivores' vegan salad. They seem to like eating things colored red."

Breeding[edit]

800px-MUJA-Tyrannosaurus.JPG


Popular culture[edit]

T-Rex drinks Absolut? Get me two cases and put it in his dressing room! And get his agent on the phone. Now, pronto, chop chop, time is money!

As human-dinosaur dynamics are being blurred by societal acceptance and new laws, dinosaurs are entering into popular culture in ways which would have been unheard of a few years ago. Just as gay people were silent and shunned as late as last Thursday, dinosaurs have emerged as our new darlings of the media.

As with all things human, some dinosaurs have been put to work in sales. Who better to shake those last quarters loose from grandma's dusty purse than a thunder lizard? When a brontosaurus tells her to buy something, the money's on the counter. "That's how much drawing power and pizzazz they have," said a spokesman for Absolut. European trends and designs now include the latest dinosaur-endorsed cosmetics and fashions, and when the more prominent dinosaurs started to wear bling, the sales of claw rings, tail garb, and giant nipple rings went through the roof (in some cases, literally).

Dinosaurs working at parks, pizza parlors, or as referees at sporting events have become so commonplace that humans no longer even notice the subtle changes. Fox News spokesman Bill O'Reilly said, "creeping dinosaurism, entering every aspect of human society, can only lead humans down the primrose path of gotch'ya, and before they know it they will be the ones serving dinosaurs plates of human legs, breasts, and white meat in restaurants." Most dismiss this dismal view, "poo-poo" the more frightful scenarios, and insist that the future of dino-human relationships is bright, long, and full of promise.

The future of dinosaur-human relationships[edit]

Nuff Said.

Dinosaur footprints[edit]

  1. Because of the high union dues.
  2. The "T" stands for "T-rex.
  3. "Birds be Free" is British slang for "Hundreds of women running naked through the streets of London."

See also[edit]