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Animals are getting smarter, but only some of them

Some lost dogs can traverse mountains and cross continents to find their way home, but mine can’t find a lump of meat she’s sitting on

Nury Vittachi (The Jakarta Post)
Bangkok
Sun, January 10, 2016

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Animals are getting smarter, but only some of them

S

ome lost dogs can traverse mountains and cross continents to find their way home, but mine can'€™t find a lump of meat she'€™s sitting on.

And then I check my email and read a report about animal intelligence.

A wild monkey in India got into a truck, used the ignition key to turn it on, and managed to put it in gear, driving across a stockyard, the media reported.

This makes it considerably more intelligent than the humans I once tried to teach to drive. Me: '€œTurn left.'€ Learner: '€œWhich way'€™s left? No, don'€™t tell me, I can Google it.'€

Clearly this Indian monkey is proof of evolution. I wonder if I can persuade it to swap jobs with the guy who drove the bus I took home one night last week. He flew over bumps so fast that we passengers spent much of the ride in mid-air, like Sandra Bullock in the movie Gravity, except for the final few seconds, when we were all pinned to the ceiling.

The only comfort was a fellow passenger'€™s comment that Justin Bieber, Angelina Jolie and Katy Perry have reportedly paid US$200,000 to experience zero gravity in a Virgin Galactic spaceship due to be launched later this year, while we get the same thing regularly for small change. Actually, I would pay that much to send Mr Bieber into space, as long as it was a one-way ticket.

Animals are getting smarter. A turkey recently broke out of a high security turkey farm in the UK three times, I read in a news link sent to me by reader Aalia Shan. The bird has been named Houdini and turkey-farmer Geoff Mellin took it off death row, telling a local reporter that it was no coincidence that Houdini'€™s escapes happened during peak turkey consumption time. '€œHe obviously knew what was going to happen,'€ he said.

And remember that guy in Taiwan who got his talking mynah bird to say nasty thing about his neighbor? Every time Wang Han-chin went to work, a voice shrieked out after him: '€œYou clueless, big-mouthed idiot.'€ Wang tried to take out a lawsuit but prosecutors said there was legal no way to charge '€œlower forms of life'€ with slander. (Thought: Can nationalist politicians use this defense?)

My plan for world peace is to get a flock of talking mynah birds and teach them to say three things. 1) '€œHelp, I'€™ve been turned into a mynah bird.'€ 2) '€œYou are the chosen one who has to find a way to reverse the spell.'€ 3) '€œHurry up, idiot.'€ Then I will release them into the world'€™s trouble zones to distract people from fighting. Worth a try, right?

A colleague says blue parakeets have the biggest vocabularies, and '€œa famous one called Puck knew 1,728 words'€. This is definitely more than some humans I know, who get through their lives with a dozen utterances, most of which are just grunts.

Now my stupid dog is in a bad mood because she thinks I have hidden the piece of meat she is STILL sitting on. And talking of snacks, where did I put my chocolate bar? Uh-oh.
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The writer is a columnist and journalist.

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