Jan 13, 2011 21:15
Notes on Neko culture - prepared by Dr Leslie Thompkins
Nekos are cat people, the product of a cloning experiment out of Japan. In their time, they were the high of fashion but now they are rarely seen and have become quite a collector’s item, often fetching for over six figures on the open market.
Created to be sex-toys, Nekos mature quickly but maintain their playful, almost child-like nature for many years. Tied in with the feline DNA is a desperate need for sexual release. This release is required by Nekos to maintain health brain chemistry. Without regular sex, Nekos become depressed and sluggish, and eventually fall into a coma from which they must to be put down.
Nekos are not classified as human and therefore not covered by human rights. Nekos are bought and sold as pets and slaves with no controls or legislation protecting them from harm or abuse.
During the late 20th century, many Nekos attempted to make a better life for themselves by ‘mainstreaming’ - surgically removing their tails and ears to pass as human. Although international law dictated mainstreamers were to be put down upon discovery, many slipped through the cracks.
Now that they are no-longer in fashion, Nekos are now rarely factory produced. The Nekos now seen are generally genetic throw-back, the offspring of escaped mainstreamers or carriers the feline gene.
The Wayne Collection
Billionaire philanthropist Bruce Wayne holds one of the largest collections of Nekos outside Japan. Believed to have all be ‘rescues’, his harem consists of three males. Despite the media’s constant jibs about the playboy’s endurance, Wayne remains a staunch advocate of neo-human rights and claims he owns to three Nekos to protect them from the abuse.
au notes