Housing Cat-astrophe – New York Post
August 25, 2010 by JimmyB
Filed under 1 Video Clips
About a dozen cats are believed to be trapped in the crawl spaces at the Ravenswood Housing projects in Long Island City. Story: www.nypost.com The Post Got It Covered: Red Carpet: www.youtube.com Post Movie Reviews: www.youtube.com News: www.youtube.com Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: www.facebook.com RSS: gdata.youtube.com iGoogle Gadget: www.google.com

They need to adopt these kitties and find homes all over the east coast.
Glad in a way they were eating the food instead of attacking the songbirds in that area.
omg ma cuz lives there
Wait once you get rid of the cats the rats will come back
. Cats kill mice and rats for fun.
@tidemover At least rats are native and food for wildlife. Not these feral pests.
damn she been living there since she was child!!! She needs to move fuck out! lmao
omg poor kitties! I hope someone steps in to help them.
@ebolaoutkast Aren’t the cats wildlife? After all they kill the rats
@tidemover
wild·life –noun
1. undomesticated animals living in the wild, including those hunted for food, sport, or profit.
@alexra0089 LOL if you know like I do, project apartments are handed down like family jewels. Here it is a prized posession because it is cheap and you don’t pay for electric. YOu know that place belonged to her mom before she got it. LOL the story of the ghetto baby.
that lady needs to be Auto tune
hhaha “oh no theres about a dozen cats locked in a crawlspace with no food or water” and its 150 degrees!?!? bullshit it is….who gives a fuck
@ebolaoutkast As you previously stated Feral. A feral cat is a domesticated cat that has returned to the wild, or the offspring of such a cat. It is distinguished from a stray cat, which is a pet cat that has been lost or abandoned.
@tidemover Not necessarily. The wild version of felis catus is the Asian wild cat (Felis silvestris). Cats are what are known as an ‘invasive species’. Just because they are ‘wild’ in that they make poor pets, doesn’t mean they belong outside. They aren’t natural there. As presented in this video, they are hanging around waiting for food, which isn’t ‘wild’ behavior at all.