Rats have quite a bit of intelligence and can make surprisingly good pets. Weasels have a certain elegance and they are warm-blooded mammals. Even lampreys are not totally horrible. I think a HAGFISH would be a better mascot for the greedy, slimy, bizarro-world GOP of today.
You should check them out - they are just about the most repulsive vertebrate animal I've ever read about. In fact, they are so primitive that they are not closely related to real fishes at all. They are
alien compared even to lampreys. They are covered with amazing amounts of
slime, and the way they eat the bodies of their dead and dying prey is
gruesome and repellent. (They have no jaws, and you could say they really get into their work and tie themselves up in knots.) They are basically of not much use to anyone, so far as I can tell, except probably to some specific co-evolved parasites, to researchers in vertebrate evolution, to biochemists studying their amazing slime, and to Koreans, who eat them (after the slime has been removed).
They are MUCH worse than lampreys, it seems to me, and the slime and several other features make them ideal neocon mascots. They eat not only dead, rotting prey, but they attack helpless netted or hooked fish as well. Their
voracious greed is legendary.
http://www.jyi.org/volumes/volume5/issue7/features/lee.html(snip)
The natural foods of hagfish include worms and benthic infauna (creatures that live within seafloor sediments) or epifauna (creatures that live upon the sea floor), but hagfish are more infamous as voracious scavengers.
Preferring the soft, inner flesh of dead and decaying marine life, hagfish can actually burrow into an organism's body and devour it from the inside out, resulting in the pulsating appearance of the dead body. "Hagfish should be called ‘fish' with the knowledge that they are only distantly related to the world's fishes," says Dr. Steven Webster, senior marine biologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California and 24-year veteran of invertebrate zoology. According to Dr. Webster, hagfish are "an ancient group that branched off from the chordate line probably before the vertebrate column appeared in the tree of life." Webster appreciates hagfish for their evolutionary and taxonomic heritages. As members of the class Agnatha and order Cyclostomata, they are one of a handful of jawless fishes with
odd sucker-shaped mouths. Agnathids such as lampreys and hagfish
appear quite worm-like, but they are actually scaleless, chordate fish (embryologically related to vertebrates and others in the phylum Chordata). The hagfish at the Monterey Bay Aquarium reside in the "Mysteries of the Deep" exhibit, where they lie happily curled on the bottom next to a fake fish carcass.
Hagfish have yet another curious feature: They produce a viscous white slime. While lampreys do not have slime glands, hagfish have 75 to 100 glands from head to cloaca, with ducts that release thick globs of exudate when the hagfish is disturbed.
Hagfish slime, being thick and sticky, is known to be extremely unfriendly to the touch and can appear shockingly suddenly. Moreover, seawater enhances the viscosity and thickness of the slime. It is said that when you have one bucket of angry hagfish, you will soon need another bucket for the overflowing slime. (snip)