Let’s take a break from
the sad events at the DC office building, where workers were shocked and
saddened to discover Steve,
their K5 security robot, had drowned his sorrows (and himself) in the building
water feature.
Let’s instead go to
Colorado, where another office building was the scene of activities that were
first assumed to be criminal—vandalism, if not theft. But then security camera
footage revealed that the smashed-in glass door was the work of what NPR refers
to as a “rogue
goat”.
Well, really—I don’t
know how “rogue” a goat is for ramming…well, pretty much anything, tbh. I mean,
that’s entirely within male goat behavior patterns.
It’s interesting that
Billy (if the robot is Steve, surely this goat can be Billy, no?) seemed
surprised at the first shattering, but then went back to finish off the second
door. And yet…having smashed both of them, he just kind of drifted away.
Can this behavior be
mere coincidence in a state that’s legalized marijuana? Hmm.
However, this occurred
to me: is there something unique to male goats’ head-structure (and possibly
rams as well) that enables them to engage in this sort of activity all the time
without them suffering TBI? (Although, maybe their brains are liquefied jelly,
and no one notices; I suppose that’s possible.)
But if there is
something that protects their crania, can some lessons be applied to the
prevention and treatment of TBI in humans? Man—I’d sure like to see our
soldiers protected from this kind of thing out in the field, and it would be
great if both soldiers and civilians could be given post-trauma medical
treatment that reduced brain swelling and other aftereffects.
I for one ain't too proud to learn from goats, rogue or no.
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