Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady, if you're not the same poster who wrote about sneaking around to put out rat poison at her surrounding areas of business, you really should get together with her. That would be amazing.
No, I didn't even see it. And I see many rat traps on the business around me. The residents and the DC mayor are the problems.
Ot seems theres a handful of us in DC who dont much care for rats....
No doubt about that! You have company - and I can imagine how dirty is your house.
DC is #5 rattiest cities in U.S.:
https://patch.com/district-columbia/washingtondc/most-rat-infested-cities-washington-dc-top-5
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady, if you're not the same poster who wrote about sneaking around to put out rat poison at her surrounding areas of business, you really should get together with her. That would be amazing.
No, I didn't even see it. And I see many rat traps on the business around me. The residents and the DC mayor are the problems.
Ot seems theres a handful of us in DC who dont much care for rats....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
A friend of mine was biking home after work when a huge rat jumped on his leg. He fell off and broke his leg.
Lucky; they usually go straight for the neck!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
A friend of mine was biking home after work when a huge rat jumped on his leg. He fell off and broke his leg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lady, if you're not the same poster who wrote about sneaking around to put out rat poison at her surrounding areas of business, you really should get together with her. That would be amazing.
No, I didn't even see it. And I see many rat traps on the business around me. The residents and the DC mayor are the problems.
Anonymous wrote:Lady, if you're not the same poster who wrote about sneaking around to put out rat poison at her surrounding areas of business, you really should get together with her. That would be amazing.
Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.
Anonymous wrote:I am a foreigner and I feel like Americans don't care about rats or mice. They try to control the number of cats (try to adopt one and you will see!), but not rats. Jerry is a hero, Tom is the villain. Mickey, Stuart Little, and Ratatouille are all American creations, great childhood heroes.
In my country, it is not okay to have rats running on your backyard overnight. Here, it's common and it doesn't even matter if it's in a wealthy or poor neighborhood.
That being said, maybe a typhus outbreak would solve this problem.