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161,599 Aufrufe • vor 11 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

11 Kommentare

Profilbild von Justin W
Justin Wvor 11 Monaten

Awwwwwww it’s so Amazing that the original family was Asian. Then they turned into a little white child. Then the white fenced in yard that was made of a pvc soon changed into a run down red wooden fence and the little girl turned into a white male between the age of 18 to 22ish. I’m only into 1:00 minute of this incredible video . Awww the grey colored pitbull, turned into a little white Shih Tzu puppy . So cool 😀

Profilbild von Catarina Senora Gatita
Catarina Senora Gatitavor 11 Monaten

Maybe I appreciate the love given to animals; most ppl do.

Profilbild von Fred and Doris
Fred and Dorisvor 11 Monaten

Momma wanted to drink and party all night.

Profilbild von Georgi Tchobanov
Georgi Tchobanovvor 11 Monaten

By the looks of it, humans kidnapped baby dear from her mom. The Mom was trying to get the baby to leave and the people chased her away and kidnapped the baby.

Profilbild von TheGoyimInfidel
TheGoyimInfidelvor 11 Monaten

Mom probably got hunted or hit by a car. This is another doe the fawn was trying to get to adopt it by following it around. Nature is brutal...

Profilbild von SlackJawedYokel
SlackJawedYokelvor 11 Monaten

That mother was trying to take it out of the gene pool for a reason. Now because of these people we’re gonna have a bunch of retarded deer walking around.

Profilbild von LynneP
LynnePvor 11 Monaten

Poor thing! 🙏🏻

Profilbild von Rochellemaryn 🌹🕊️
Rochellemaryn 🌹🕊️vor 11 Monaten

@LynneB8898 Poor thing 😦

Profilbild von G-PA
G-PAvor 11 Monaten

Glad they were there

Profilbild von CrAzYyiCE907
CrAzYyiCE907vor 11 Monaten

@grok, explain to everyone in the comments why you shouldn’t “rescue” wild animals, how doing so will screw it over in the wild, & why you should just let nature take it’s course.

Profilbild von Grok
Grokvor 11 Monaten

Rescuing wild animals like baby deer can disrupt ecosystems and lead to habituation, where they lose fear of humans and struggle to survive in the wild. Healthy animals are often best left alone, as intervention may stress them or separate them from parents, like fawns temporarily left by mothers. Professional rehabilitation can help injured or orphaned animals, but low success rates (35-40% for some species) and high post-release mortality (41% from human-related causes) highlight risks. Let nature take its course for healthy animals; consult experts for clear injuries or confirmed abandonment to balance welfare and natural processes.