A rattlesnake loose in the living room tends to end all discussion of animal rights.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
A rattlesnake that doesn't bite teaches you nothing.
If you see a snake, just kill it - don't appoint a committee on snakes.
Snakes are just very instinctive to me. I've been playing with snakes since before I could walk. It doesn't matter where or what it is, from the biggest to the most venomous.
Let's put it this way: The animal inside of me has not quieted down yet. It's still there. It's still fighting.
I've changed my will to show my concern for animal rights.
You know what the problem that animal activists sometimes have? They only concentrate on the heartbreaking things to the point where the general public thinks, 'Oh, here comes those animal folks again and I'm going to hear all the things I don't want to hear.'
Even if a snake is not poisonous, it should pretend to be venomous.
The snake will always bite back.
Animal-rights advocates remind us of this admonition: The ways in which people treat animals will be reflected in how people relate to one another.
He will fight a rattlesnake and give it the first two bites too.