The world is big, and there is no wonder. There is a college student who likes pets very much, but he likes some cold-blooded pets instead of cats and dogs. Everyone knows that the dormitory, as a collective living place, is forbidden to keep pets such as cats and dogs, but many school rules have loopholes in keeping pets, and there is no explicit stipulation that cold-blooded animals are not allowed to be kept, so this female college student keeps snakes in the dormitory.
At first, two snakes were raised in the dormitory. Later, rats were raised to feed the snakes. In order to keep mice, you must keep bugs. There are three incubators on the dormitory table, which are two snakes, a nest of mice and dozens of bugs. Some people object to her practice, while others agree. After all, it is still very penetrating on the whole.
According to people at that time, she never let it out, but covered the incubator with a curtain. Her pet was vaccinated and would not be harmful to people's health. But do you put these things in the dormitory with the consent of your roommate?
Dormitories belong to public places, not individuals. Once a roommate quarreled with her many times because of her pet, and later chose to move out and rent a house.
In this regard, some students think that it is nothing more than personal preference, but most students also hold an objection: it is terrible to think that I lack public morality and influence others. I want to move because I am a roommate, and I am afraid because I am a boy.
Finally, I was reported by my classmates, but the school rules only prohibit pets such as cats and dogs. There is really no relevant regulation for these cold-blooded pets. Therefore, the school tried its best to communicate with the client and brought these pets back to her parents to raise them.