Ted Lieu Wants To Criminalize Glue Traps
The congressman's "Glue Trap Prohibition Act" would make it illegal to sell glue traps or even use them in the home.

I have a mouse in my apartment, and he's a clever one. Clever enough, in fact, that he's managed to avoid the very tempting baited snap traps I've placed around the areas of the kitchen where I've seen him appear.
Since those snap traps haven't been working, I recently swapped them out for glue boards. In my experience, these do a better job of catching mice and blocking off potential points of entry.
At the moment, the method of pest control I use to keep uninvited, potentially diseased rodents out of my home is a personal, private choice I have the freedom to make. A new bill from Rep. Ted Lieu (D–Calif.) would make me a federal criminal.
Earlier this week, Lieu unveiled the "Glue Trap Prohibition Act of 2024," which would amend federal pesticide regulations to ban the sale and use of glue traps.
The penalties for violating the specific subchapter that Lieu is inserting his glue trap ban into include fines of up to $5,000 per offense for commercial violators and $1,000 fines for individuals. That subchapter also allows criminal penalties—including up to a year's imprisonment for commercial violators and 30 days imprisonment for private persons who violate the law.
Should Lieu's bill become law, the three glue boards I have in my kitchen would open me up to $3,000 in fines and maybe a month in federal lockup.
The congressman justifies his glue trap ban on humanitarian and health grounds.
"Glue traps are ruthless, inhumane, and can be dangerous to the health of humans and their pets," said Lieu in a statement. "There are numerous other ways to trap small animals that don't prolong their suffering."
His press release about the bill mentions that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) doesn't recommend the use of glue traps because the trapped live animals could more easily spread disease. The CDC also recommends against the use of live traps that don't harm the animal for the same reason. Lieu's bill doesn't ban the latter.
Lieu's press release also claims that animals that don't escape glue traps die of "blood loss, suffocation, or dehydration." But that's only if you let them sit there, which, I concede, is somewhat cruel. It's also kind of gross, as the whole point of the trap is to kill the rodent and get it out of your house. (The easiest way to do this is to slip a plastic bag around the animal and glue trap and either stomp on the bag or hit it with a hammer, dumbbell, or other heavy object.)
While it might be trite or archaic to raise this point, one does wonder where exactly Lieu thinks Congress gets the authority to regulate the use of glue traps in private homes. Not even a New Deal Supreme Court justice could honestly argue that placing a sticky piece of paper on your floor affects interstate commerce.
Obviously, some people are going to be more concerned than myself with the welfare of vermin. People also have pets or small children who might get stuck in a glue trap. In those cases, perhaps some other type of trap is more appropriate. It seems like that's something that individuals can decide for themselves.
So long as people have the option of humanely dispatching mice with poison, electrocution, or neck-snapping metal bars, I'd also like to have the right to use traps that work without the risk of going to federal prison.
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There was other ways... Called D-Con pellets ... until you F'En Democratic [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] took that away about a decade or so ago.
I used to use snap traps. Imagine my surprise when I found a snap trap in the garage with a mouse victim who had been mostly eaten by his brethren. Little cannibals. I switched to glue traps figuring I could make use of built-in bait that way.
This proposed law is just another example of a society failing because miscreants and malefactors are too lightly treated, and some times not even penalized at all.
Possession of a glue trap, whether laid out or merely possessed while in it's wrapping, should be a felony. Now since I'm not a lawyer, nor do I play one on TeeVee, I can't elaborate on what "degree" felony would be appropriate (different states use different designations), but the period of incarceration for having one of these monstrosities in one's abode should be the same as scalding a dog or dousing a cat with kerosene and lighting it. In some cases the poor mouse struggles against the glue for more than 24 hours before succumbing to inanition and being consumed by his fellows.
Hell, it ought to be a constipated misdemeanor just to have a bottle of Elmer's White Glue in one's possession.
How did I know this guy would be from California?
The guy walks, talks, looks and quacks exactly like a Red Chinese Great Leaper Forward. Is it any wonder nazi Trumpanzees can't look at the Dems without seeing Eastasian soldiers rushing out of the Two Minutes' Hate screens straight at them brandishing imitation sten guns?
California, the home of wacky liberal do-gooders. Florida, the home of wacky conservative corpse-mutilators.
They are pretty disgusting. Never used them [I prefer a more human methods that actually kills the critter vs getting it stuck in a micro version of the Berea Tar Pits] but when I was renting an apartment in New Orleans some years back, I found one that someone had disposed of by throwing in into the back yard. There was all kinds of mammal and insect victims stuck to it, some expired and some in the process of dying of dehydration etc. Made sure anything sentient was dead and then put a match to it.
It's really fun when a dog decides to roll around in one.
Yeah, we really need legislation to address the feelings of fucking mice. All else being equal, I'd prefer the mice I trap in my house die quickly and with minimal suffering. But the important thing is that they die.
It's just because Lieu keeps getting his dick stuck in them.
That is the best comment in this whole thread!!!!
Note to foreign readers: the comenter's own cultural bias militates against causing food cattle unnecessary pain on the packing plant killing floor. The proper Republican response to foreign totalitarian campaigns demanding equal treatment for THEIR protein sources would be to place a high sumptuary tariff on rat and glue imports, then demand that our exports of surplus rats be allowed to land duty-free at Canton, with no clipboard-toting Wuhan quarantine geeks meddling in any way. But noooooo!
A mouse dying a slow death is fun to watch. What? You're not talking about Disney?
A mouse dying a slow death is fun to watch.
You are (talking about Disney)?
Would duck tape sticky side up “accidentally “ left on the floor count as a violation?
Spilled hair removal wax, tile mastic/thin set, spray adhesive overspray, rubber cement, fly paper, leftover wallpaper, leftover 3M Command strips, dried honey, pine tar, sports adhesive "tape" spray, the stuff they use to stick your credit card or gift cards to the envelope left lying around...
Come to think of it, in lieu of passing any other legislation, the Congressman should first produce an unequivocally clear and exhaustive list of what does and does not constitute an illegal glue trap and not come back until he's done.
Is Lieu denying the right of the people to keep and bear glue guns?The money would be better spent on Department of Transportation snap-down bridge research to get the feral troll population under control.
Fuck Ted Lieu.
"Glue traps are ruthless, inhumane, and can be dangerous to the health of humans and their pets," said Lieu in a statement. "There are numerous other ways to trap small animals that don't prolong their suffering."
I guess I over-estimate the ability of Ted and his friends to avoid getting stuck and dying in mouse traps. But I bet they have some delicious recipes.
This due has no idea what happens to mice on farms and barns.
"Any means necessary" comes to mind.
I had a German shorthair-lab cross that was death to pocket gophers. She could be running at a dead spring stop, smell one a foot below the surface, dig it out in an amazingly brief amount of time. One time one bit her lip, she flipped the little bastard up in the air and swallowed it with one gulp, still alive. Not sure how humane it was having it die in her stomach (dogs have an amazingly acidic stomach juices). Also, cats are vicious. I've gotten tired of watching them play with their kills, and taken them away and dispatch them myself, because cats are just vicious and cruel. Catch it, let it go, catch it again, let it go, until the poor animal dies of exhaustion. Then the cats always act like I've insulted them when I take the mouse, shrew, vole or whatever away and stomp it. Like I've taken away their favorite toy. Nature is a bitch.
Not sure how humane it was having it die in her stomach (dogs have an amazingly acidic stomach juices).
I’ve never seen a dog do this. Not that I don’t believe you, but I have seen dogs kill lots of things and that actually sounds pretty humane.
If you’ve ever seen a dog with a stuffed toy fling and flail it endlessly over the course of several hours, tear the seams apart, tear the stuffing out until they get to the squeaker, and then chew the squeaker apart… live animals may stop squeaking sooner, may be filled with different stuff, may not have seams that are as hard or easy to tear into… I’ve never once seen a dog disappointed one way or the other.
And, again, dogs are social animals, so I assume they find it more fun when they get to do this sort of thing in packs.
Are these the same people who expect us to eat crickets?
“Who speaks for the crickets?”
Coming from politicianss this what's called professional coutesy? Neopotism perhaps?
🙂
😉
(D–Calif.)
And there you have it.
Fascists gotta do fascism.
Jeez, these guys are all commies, but okay.
Technically, they are actually fascists: they share most of the views of communists but still want regulated private ownership of the means of production
They think that having the State "suggest" that private owners violate the rights of the people is different in some way from the State violating those rights directly; also it allows them to keep the private "owners" under tighter control once they're able to weaponize the threat of prosecution for having done all the bat things the Gov't agencies "suggested" they do...
Until someone like Elon comes along, and decides to cost himself $Billions to buy one of those operations and then releases the email traffic to the public...
That is certainly a huge pile of stupid.
There should be a bill that outlaws Ted Lieu. A sit stands, the federal government has no business passing this kind of law.
It would be a Bill of Attainder to outlaw Ted Lieu by name and thus Unconstitutional.
However, it would be perfectly Constitutional, and cromulent with Libertarianism, to make Congresscritters subject to life imprisonment for acting to violate the Life, Liberty, and Property of U.S. Citizens. Libertarian Sci-Fi writer L. Neil Smith had proposed as much years ago and I fully agree with that.
We could just label him an insurrectionists, than per the leftist own argument no trial needed and he can be banned without any due process.
There should be a choice, and this Representative is just a moron (how could we guess he's from California - HTF do they breed stupid there?). As for me, I avoid them as I have better mouse traps in the house (who would not be fond of the glue traps themselves).
The best mouse trap we ever had, guaranteed to catch multiple mice at a time, was a gallon jar, with a peanut butter cracker in the bottom, and a ramp up to the lip. We sometimes have four or five mice in it in under an hour. Growing up on the edge of wheat fields with old barns etc, mice were a constant problem. And barn cats didn't survive long due to the coyotes and red tail hawks in the area. If they survived the winter we counted them as long term survivors. Then again, we rarely ran out of barn cats either, because they reproduce at almost the same rate as the damn mice.
They don't exactly breed stupid in CA, but they do make a concerted effort to elevate it into positions of maximum authority.
Ted Lieu doing his best to debunk Asian stereotypes.
That's funny
Would Mr. Lieu care as much for the state's people. We here in Los Angeles are subject to a controlling monopoly internet provider (Spectrum) that manages to extract ever more money from us techno trapped.
Not sorry, no monopoly.
Five seconds on Google:
https://www.cnet.com/home/internet/best-internet-providers-in-los-angeles-ca/
There at least seven providers:
Cheap internet options in Los Angeles
The average starting price for internet service in Los Angeles is approximately $41 monthly. If you're looking for the most affordable internet plans in your area, multiple options are available that are cheaper than the average cost. The cheapest plan is Starry Connect, which costs $15 monthly and offers speeds up to 30Mbps.
Nearly all of the providers listed also participate in the Affordable Connectivity Program from the Federal Communications Commission. It provides a $30 per month benefit to qualifying households to help them afford high-speed internet service. As you can see from the chart below, some providers' cheap internet plans -- like those from Cox, Race Communications and Starry -- will ultimately be free when combined with the ACP credit.
Spectrum is not a monopoly. There *are* other ways to get your internet, hon.
Spectrum might have a monopoly on cable-based service, but there should be at least a DSL option from AT&T if their fiber isn't available in your area yet. There's also at least one satellite based provider which should work well anywhere in Southern California (Starlink is definitely available, but costs a lot more than Spectrum), and the bandwidth on 5G wireless internet is good enough for anyone that's not looking to "cut the cord" on cable and switch to streaming multiple HD screens simultaneously.
Options which are workable for apartment/condo living people might be restricted by the building policies/infastructure, but that's not the result of a market monoply or anything that the Federal Government can do anything about
You'd think Congress has more important, pressing issues to address beyond banning mouse traps that use glue.
After Reagan, Nixon and Congress banned beer, wine, whiskey, peyote, mushrooms, flowers, twigs and seeds, roots, stimulants, entheogens but NOT nutmeg, dramamine, stramonium or beladonna, voters in Representative Lieu's district doubtless started showing up at the free clinic with mousetraps stuck to their faces.
I was around for Nixon, Reagan and a whole bunch of congresses and legally drank every variety of alcoholic beverage. Of course I lived in a place called reality. You should visit it once in while Hank.
Representative Lieu, can you please point to the clause in Article I Section 8 of The Constitution of the United States where this a matter for Congress and the Federal Government?
I did not think so.
In CA Dem circles, the Constitution is seen as an impediment to the "proper role" of government, and is to be disregarded in any and all situations where it can't be circumvented.
There's not really any viable alternative to explain the number of CA laws which have been shut down and/or overturned by the Federal Courts lately.
Isn't this kinda academic? How is someone gonna know if you have one and are using it? Unless you make it obvious, no one's going to see it. I'm sure I do plenty things that are illegal. Fireworks, for example. They're very visible and no one seems to mind. If I were setting them off in my home, who'd know?
They won't know if you use an old one, but acquiring new ones might become rather difficult.
It’s not like the mice are human fetuses or anything.
Ah! The Christian National Socialist girl-bullying Ceausescu fan finally gets summoned to active duty with the Robert Dear Army of God battalion. Mohammed be praised!
I guess there is no issue too small for the mini minds in Congress to propose legislation to control or outlaw. What's next ? A law prohibiting Cats from catching and killing mice?
If they quit "demonstrating leadership" by manufacturing trivial problems which they can then pretend to invent solutions to, then someone might ask them why the CA homeless population keeps increasing, or worse yet, ask them why the primary solution in L.A. County seems to be to establish the foundations for permanent slums to begin forming as opposed to allowing someone somewhere in the County to actually build some significant amount of new housing.
Eh, if you have to kill something, it should be quick and painless as possible. Glue traps are not quick nor painless, they force the animal to starve to death.
I mean, would reason object if glue traps were used to kill convicted prisoners? Obviously.
Under index tab Useful Idiots: at an Austin supermarket some impressionable child had actually scrawled "crool" on some of those vermin traps. Government ownership of schools, excuse me, skoolz, had to result in this.
On the other hand, is 'Tarring and Feathering' a totalitarian politician considered a 'glue trap'?
Tar is made from fossil fuels, and how did you obtain the feathers? Sounds like it would be problematic per idiots like Lieu.
You'll have to use pine tar and humanely harvested feathers.
When I'm using glue traps or live traps, I check them daily, then humanely execute whatever might have been caught with a 1000fps .177 pellet in the brain.
It’s also kind of gross, as the whole point of the trap is to kill the rodent and get it out of your house.
Slight disagreement. Not to pass any laws or anything but, the whole point of the trap is to kill the rodent *with minimal manual intervention* *disposably*. Mechanical bait traps, live or dead, while also reusable, require baiting, manual activation, get tripped accidentally, don’t always trigger appropriately, need stored or disposed of after use, etc., etc. With a glue trap, as long as something’s not already stuck to it, it’s good to go. “Set it and forget it.” Once it’s used, it’s just a thin sheet of wood or plastic with a rodent attached. Chuck the whole thing with no need to concern yourself as to whether you’re throwing out something that’s still usable.
Trapping the animal with glue, prepping the scene for the impending murder... while it's still a murder, bashing it’s head in with the blunt force object of choice, and then ushering the whole affair into the garbage is a lot more waste and work.
Let's all gather up mice and send them to this clown's house. After all, he's a champion for them.
Why didn't guvner Greg think of that? The Texas Rangers could host a Rat Roundup in Killeen and deport hordes of them to the Sanctuary Hoovervilles of People's California.
And within 6 weeks you'd see this bill retracted, with Glue traps being necessary to save Blue America.
Just think of the vermin we could rid ourselves of if we laid a bunch of glue traps in the halls of Congress.
My experience is that glue traps kill mice caught in them fairly soon - checking the traps every 12 to 24 hours, I've never found a live mouse, and that suggests they're dead in less than an hour. Mice don't starve that quickly. I think it's suffocation from the glue dragging down more and more of their chest hair. It's not humane, but they're mice. If my wife wasn't allergic to cats, I wouldn't need traps and the mice would suffer more.
I prefer snap traps because they are reusable - this year as the field mice have gradually found a way into my house to get out of the winter, a single good snap trap set in a run and baited with butter has caught over a dozen mice. It's usually more humane but not always - on two occasions, there was a live mouse caught in that trap by a leg. So it was trapped with a mangled leg, and probably struggling for hours overnight before I found it.
The early bird gets the worm, but it's the second mouse that gets the cheese.
Even if it passed, it would probably never be enforced, at least not against non-commercial "offenders." There are so many federal criminal offenses on the books that federal law enforcement agencies really have to cherry-pick which cases they'll pursue, and even which laws they'll bother to enforce. Can you really picture the feds allocating their resources to the enforcement of this proposed law?
Maybe Lieu should work on any of the massive problems California has before he gets around to worrying about fucking mice.
These are deeply unserious people and its sad anyone is paying attention to them.
What is sad is seeing taxes pay them.
I catch the rodents in a havahart live trap and let them go in a marsh about a mile away. I'm hoping I'll qualify for dispensation when the "Congressional Committee on Reparations for Mice and Rats" comes after all you killers.
We let our mice go to, we caught in a live trap. Well, then we go after them with our Daisy Red Riders. And no, I didn't shoot my eye out, but got pretty good at snap shots.
That's pretty on the nose.
I mean, he's literally saying at this point, "Just let the rats come into our homes with total impunity."
ps. is this same Liu that had himself photographed a decade ago eating campbell's soup out of a can - like literally nobody on earth does - in the back of his opulent limo in order to illustrate how hard it is to live on foodstamps or something? I want to say that dude was from NYC - but I mean, it could just as easily be Cali I guess.
I buy a package of mouse baits and put on a shelf in the basement safe from kids and pets. I don't even have to open the package. The mice can smell it. They rip it open and commit suicide. My conscience is clear.
This is what happens when libertarians strategically campaign to put adults in the room. Sooner or later they come for you. Do you think Trump gives a shit how you dispose of mice?
Hopefully, Trump will gather up all the pistols and ammunition Obama bought for all kinds of federal agencies that don't need them, and issue them to every republican for home defense. Including defense against mice.
Who will defend the republic if the republicans are afraid of mice?
Whose afraid of mice?
As if Congress doesn't have any more important problems to solve! Mr. Lieu needs to find a different job.
LOL - what else is he qualified for?
We used to go after the fuvkers on the farm growing up with a Louisville slugger. Is that humane? Flip over a board or something and go to town. Air rifles were also utilized. Or sic the dogs on them. We were at war with those fuckers. And never seemed to make a dent in their population. We had one that would come out and sit in the floor (always seemed to do it during Jeopardy) and watch the TV. That is until Dad let the tom inside for a day.
I also took a gopher with a 22 magnum revolver, fixed sights, two summers ago at about 25 meters, only took three shots. First a bit to the left. Second a bit to the right, third... dead gopher. Damn thing just stood there and watched the first two shots miss and let me get the correct windage. Last mistake it ever made.
It's a Freedom Ams Single Action Army clone, with a five and half inch barrel. and the gophers we have are mainly Richardson Ground squirrels, their about a pound fully mature. Not like some of the bruisers y'all get back east.
It is not clear to me that this is a Federal issue. I don’t see how it is connected with National Defense or Interstate Commerce. It should be a matter for the States to decide. Why can’t the Feds stick to what they are there for?
What part of (D) do you not understand?
EVERYTHING is a federal problem.
Standard Victor snap traps work great if used properly. They have to be baited, set, and placed correctly for reliable results. Securing them to the floor rather than leaving them sitting loose is helpful.
I have seen live mice trapped in snap traps. The traps breaking their backs rather than neck. Pretty gross and leaves the unpleasant task of killing the mouse. As the author notes when using traps you need to check them regularly and address any issues, like live animals trapped..
Just last month, over Christmas, wife's truck engine compartment had a large rat living in it. Built a nest right on top of the engine block. When we opened the hood, I saw the back end of it as it scurried somewhere further down into the guts of the truck. Drove the truck out of the garage used leafblower and hose to clear out the engine block. Inspected all the wiring, etc. that we could see and didn't see any evidence of chewing on those, just bits of paper towel roll it had found in the garage as nesting material.
Set several baited rat-size snap traps, and of the baited chipmunk/squirrel/rat live traps we have in the garage.
We left the truck outside for 2 freezing cold night with the hood open to make it unattractive, after poking around all the places we could with some bamboo plant stakes we had to try to find the thing and get it to move out.
After two days, nothing in the traps. No new nesting signs. So she brought the truck back into the garage.
Next morning, it's back in the engine compartment with a new nest. Repeated the process, but that night also used a FLIR camera and found that it was hiding on the muffler (classic rat-shape in the FLIR photo on my phone). At which point, we got in the truck and drove around for 15 minutes to try to dislodge it. But now everything was hot in the car and the FLIR wouldn't work so we couldn't confirm.
But I had also bought a large glue trap and some poison. As soon and the engine was cool enough, I laid the glue trap right where the nests had been. Also laid some of the poison packs in inviting spots. We're kinda loathe to use poison, as we have dogs and cats (how can we have rats?). I repeated the process for a few days, removing the poison and glue trap each morning before she left for work and then after.
The ride must have worked, because we never had any traps go off, never caught anything in the glue trap, and never saw any poison nibbled on. But the glue trap was a key part of the strategy, since the nesting location would not allow a snap trap to operate.
Her truck is starting to smell less and less after several hosings-out, but some of that rat poo got baked on before she realized what was happening.
With the dogs and cats largely taking care of the small rodent population (and lizards), with the cats leaving their prizes for us to find, our normal pests tend to be armadillos, skunks, and coyotes, which tend to require lead-based solutions.
Suggestion: Have your engine compartment cleaned with dry ice. Don't try to do it yourself . take it to auto detailer who knows how to do it . Your engine and engine bay will look as clean as new and it will get rid of those lingering rat feces smell. worked on 20 year old Honda. Avoids the pitfalls of power washing. Just a suggestion
Internet commentary might be improved by a Lieu Law mandating glue board paving under every bridge in the nation.
Dear Ted: I don't want mice , rats or any type of vermin in my house and I will use whatever means I damn please to rid my house , garage and other structures on my property of these pests. Not thinking about the mice or rats. Just thinking about me.
I don't use them for mice. But here in the southwest they're an essential tool for trapping scorpions and black widows and other nasty insects that make their way into your home.
I don't use them, but it's an idiotic bill introduced by a California idiot.
Even if it passed, it would probably never be enforced, at least not against non-commercial “offenders.” There are so many federal criminal offenses on the books that federal law enforcement agencies really have to cherry-pick which cases they’ll pursue, and even which laws they’ll bother to enforce. Can you really picture the feds allocating their resources to the enforcement of this proposed law?
Which is another fucking problem. The feds have to many fucking laws, many of which are constitutionally questionable. We need to grow up from the 'there should be a law' mentality. Start with victimless crimes. If they can't produce a victim then it shouldn't be illegal. Period.
If only Ted Lieu would fall into a glue trap....
It's self-protection. Think about it.
I had a friend that was convinced that a people needed to have a good war every so often. Maybe he was right.
Hard times create hard men. Hard men create goods times, good times produce soft men, soft men produce hard times. We're in the latter phase. Maybe war isn't the answer, but the Western world has had about seventy years of fairly soft time. To put it in perspective, 2% of the population served in Vietnam, < 0.05% of the population served in the GWOT. Our lives have become increasingly easy and soft.
9% served in the second world war. About ten percent in the Civil War.
They’ll probably leave glue trap do vaguely defined that it will including fly paper and so we don’t have a way to take out insect pests either.
Roach Motels are glue traps. Would these also be banned? I use Roach Motels and food grade diatomaceous earth to kill roaches because I don’t want to use poison as I have a cat.
And they wonder why there’s a culture war escalating in America! Oh, wait … they don’t actually wonder about that … it was just a rhetorical device I was using for its eye-rolling effect. With an uncountable number somewhere over four thousand Federal laws and regulations, what difference will one more idiotic unconstitutional Federal law make, really? Hey, maybe Lieu getting his name in the social democrat news entertainment media will make his career at the public trough for xim!
Dems got their Rep. Ted Lieus; Repubs got their Rep. Justin Humphreys...
They each serve the same purpose in their respective parties.
Something tells me Trump must be using glue traps.
Ted Lieu simply wants to protect his brethren. After all, you can't spell Democrats without 'rats'.
All of the crap going on in California and this idiot Democrat is worried about glue traps. That should say something about his priorities right there.
Lying Ted
I have a four legged mouse trap but he’s too fat, old, and lazy now to do much. He used to catch at least two mice a week in our yard.
We quit using them -- my wife would set the things in out-of-the way places, and then not check them regularly or leave them out at the cottage when we were gone. The mice would end up dying of dehydration or whatever. Needlessly cruel. I imposed a household ban. Some snap traps work better than others, and we now have some good ones now that seem to work very well.
These are not the only options. Glue traps really are inhumane and disgusting, although I would not make their use a case for federal intervention. A much better option is the battery-powered, easy-to-clean, no-touch, reusable traps. You just put a dab of peanut butter in the chamber, the mouse or rat wanders in, gets a jolt of high-voltage electricity which kills it immediately with no blood, then you dump it out and set the trap out again. You don't even have to replace the peanut butter for a while. You can get these traps at any hardware store.
Hope Ted outlaws paper.........those papercuts are really bloody and painful. People need to be protected.
Hope Ted outlaws paper.........those papercuts are really bloody and painful.
Mice and rats spread disease, destroy property and disproportionately adversely affect BIPOC. Sorry Ted, but you are a racist.
Lieu is on glue.
How about Glue Traps for Politicians made from their own lies?