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br> Glasgow, Kentucky /p> p> From all that I've read on this site, your readers regard you as The American Spectator 's resident philosopher. How old are you? Are you just now discovering that one can only be first by putting others first. Even the writers of Groundhog Day had learned that lesson. br> -- Tom Wolenski /p> p> Thanks Ben, good article. Have a story about the egg-laying hens. I live in the country and wanted to raise hens for fresh eggs, so I went to one of the egg farms and bought some of their three-year-old used up hens. Just so you know some of these "old" hens lived many years, but the fun part of this story is when I would get these poor hens home and put them on the ground they acted like it was going to kill them. They had never had anything but wire under them. Always made me feel good to see how happy they were to be able to scratch in the dirt and just be a chicken. br> -- Elaine Kyle /p> p> Please tell Ben Stein that the wild horses of Montana are not "shot by riflemen in helicopters." He has succumbed to animal rights propaganda, easy to happen in Hollywood.