B.C. by Mastroianni and Hart for September 27, 2020

  1. Trollspry
    Enter.Name.Here  about 4 years ago

    “Hey, it’s a living”.

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    Soups40  about 4 years ago

    No such thing as a free lunch…

     •  Reply
  3. Fb img 1516982044221
    jagedlo  about 4 years ago

    So much for that “rest of my life” bit…

     •  Reply
  4. 20210517 082929
    flagmichael  about 4 years ago

    From my wife today…

    A Rottweiler, a Doberman, and a German Shepard are in a bar. The Rottie says, “I dreamed God thought I was beautiful.” The Doberman said, “God told me I was his most perfect creation.” The German Shepard said, “I said WHAT???”

     •  Reply
  5. Profile msn
    vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 4 years ago

    There is little dignity in domestication, but there is less dignity in starvation.

     •  Reply
  6. Coyote
    eromlig  about 4 years ago

    I’m domesticated too — I’m a husband. (Some weekends I do go feral, though.)

     •  Reply
  7. Bead braid p
    I Mad Am I  about 4 years ago

    I recently read a small article about a puppy. Mummified it died in Siberia about 18,000 years ago. Oddly it is genetically neither a wolf or a dog. So… it is a kind of Missing Link between the two!

     •  Reply
  8. Felixthecat
    Auntie Socialist  about 4 years ago

    The retirement plan is pretty good

     •  Reply
  9. Tasha icon
    mrcooncat  about 4 years ago

    In China: “Soylent Green is doggies!”

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    dflak  about 4 years ago

    I read two articles in Scientific American on domestication one a decade ago, the other just yesterday.

    One of them talked about how and when man domesticated various animals like dogs, cattle and such. There is some debate as to whether cats are domesticated.

    The recent article talks about how species, including ourselves, self-domesticate. It contends that domestication comes from being friendly with members of our own species. Some species do this better than others. Some species manage to recognize other members of their own kind even if they are not immediate family members or members of their local herd. These species seem to do well.

    If we were to wind the clock back 100,000 years or so and look at the different hominoid species at the time, the smart money would be on the Neanderthals. They had almost everything going for them: intelligence, physical strength, you name it. Cro-Magnons (our ancestors) did one thing better – we formed groups bigger than an extended family – something the Neanderthals never seemed to manage to do.

    We have stopped evolving: we are now moving towards a fragmented species who are overly aggressive in protecting our tribes. We seem to be losing our ability to cooperate and even our friendliness.

     •  Reply
  11. Wizanim
    ChessPirate  about 4 years ago

    “Well, that’s it! No more lost self-respect! I’m gonna… Oooo, doggie treat!” ☺

     •  Reply
  12. Huckandfish
    Huckleberry Hiroshima  about 4 years ago

    They came to us. We didn’t go to them.

     •  Reply
  13. Mario500
    Mario500  about 4 years ago

    (examines second panel of the cartoon carefully; finds certain parts of it to had been depictions of a foot and a leg)

     •  Reply
  14. Img e0281
    joefearsnothing  about 4 years ago

    But is he “cave broke”? ;0)

     •  Reply
  15. Photo 1501706362039 c06b2d715385
    Zebrastripes  about 4 years ago

    ….but the food and bones are delicious….

     •  Reply
  16. Biflag
    Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe  about 4 years ago

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AxiATxLofk

     •  Reply
  17. Tarot
    Nighthawks Premium Member about 4 years ago

    STEP?…….STEP is not a sound….

    how about: CRUNCH!

     •  Reply
  18. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  about 4 years ago

    According to a earlier commenter, Dogs have owners. Cats have staff

     •  Reply
  19. Missing large
    silverclaw33  about 4 years ago

    Starting to hang around humans was a pretty successful evolutionary step. There are only a few thousand wolves left in the wild, but there are around 900 million dogs in the world.

     •  Reply
  20. Avatar 2475
    Troglodyte  about 4 years ago

    It’s not really a straitjacketed existence, if you think about it…

     •  Reply
  21. Nowyoulisten
    zeexenon  about 4 years ago

    Just wait till they turn you into A Chinese Crested, a Mexican Hairless, a Neapolitan Mastiff a Komondor an English Bull Terrier, or the like. Or worse, “I’m going to the vet’s to get tutored”: https://i.pinimg.com/originals/c6/87/99/c68799d3a38a3ead71fa9a948cafb7a1.jpg

     •  Reply
  22. Stinker
    cuzinron47  about 4 years ago

    How’s that hunting thing workin’ for you?

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    Northgalus2002  about 4 years ago

    I remember reading somewhere that wolves were drawn to early Neolithic (New Stone) Age campfires and were thus domesticated as dogs. It also showed how other animals were domesticated. In the Ural Mountains spanning what are now Turkey, Iraq and Iran, hunters domesticated the mountain sheep by killing the nastiest rams while being kind to the rest. They also domesticated the ox and the goat that way. And how the Scandinavians tamed the reindeer, the Andean natives the Llama, Chinese the pig, Africans the cow, Arabians the camel and just about everyone the chicken.

     •  Reply
  24. Picture 001
    rshive  about 4 years ago

    Apparently peer approval still means something.

     •  Reply
  25. Img 1610
    WCraft Premium Member about 4 years ago

    My dog has all the freedom he wants. Walks in the country with no leash, rides in a convertible, as much food as he needs, fresh water, treats, tummy rubs, a temperate and dry place to sleep on a comfortable bed, vet visits if he is ailing, no concern for his safety, someone who wants to be his best friend for life (me)…not a bad life!

     •  Reply
  26. Large adamr
    Ron Bauerle  about 4 years ago

    https://www.funny-memes.org/2018/12/wolf-humans-at-campfire-its-cold-and-im.html

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From B.C.