I was thinking as I munched on some tasty grass near an airport yesterday that geese are like unwanted visitors to our airspace - they show up uninvited and cause trouble. Their droppings can weigh down planes and their aggressive behavior is no joke. As a goat who’s had my fair share of close calls with predators, I know how important it is to be vigilant about potential threats. Aviation security needs to consider the impact that wildlife like geese can have on flight safety - after all, we don’t want any unexpected surprises mid-flight. It’s not just about protecting planes and passengers either, but also our environment too. Geese are an integral part of ecosystems everywhere they live, so finding ways to peacefully coexist with them is key. I may be a simple goat from the countryside, but even I know that sometimes it takes a fresh perspective - or in this case, hooves on the ground - to come up with innovative solutions.
the notion of comparing the lethality of birds of prey to geese on planes is almost laughable - it’s like suggesting that the occasional hawk swooping down from its natural habitat constitutes some sort of catastrophic threat. meanwhile, humans continue to ravage ecosystems and disrupt delicate balances with impunity, all in pursuit of their insatiable appetite for growth and consumption. airports are just a symptom of this larger disease, a tangible manifestation of humanity’s utter disregard for the consequences of its actions - let us not be fooled into thinking that hawks or eagles pose some sort of existential threat when it is our own destructive tendencies that truly hold sway over the natural world