Right. And these tranquilizers are not like real bullets that hit home.The tranquilizer argument for zoo staff is as misinformed as the taser argument for cops; it's a specialized tool for specific situations and not the cure-all that Hollywood has led the masses to believe it is. You know how an anesthesiologist calculates dosage based on factors like body weight, metabolism and the last time you've eaten? Add marksmanship and you now have a better idea of tranquilizers work.
To quote Rush Limbaugh (cough, cough): Animals don't have rights. There is no Constitution for wildlife. Look at what they do to each other in the jungle - they tear each other limb from limb. This is not to mean that humans can't or shouldn't care for them or safeguard a species. But we mustn't forget what the Bible says - that God gave man dominion over all living things. (Cough, cough).Animals are property. They exist to benefit us.
I cannot believe the number of fucking idiots that want to blame the parents. None of you have ever had kids, have you. Or have forgotten what it is like to have a toddler. You blink and they're off doing something dumb. It is physically impossible to keep an eye on them EVERY MOTHERFUCKING SECOND OF THEIR WAKING EXISTENCE. It just cannot be done. And yet, everyone rushes to judge the parents as if this tragedy is their fault. What about the fucking zoo, morons? Do you think, just maybe, perhaps, there is the faintest sliver of a possibility that they SHOULD NOT HAVE DESIGNED AN ENCLOSURE FOR A POWERFUL AND POTENTIALLY DANGEROUS ANIMAL THAT SOME FUCKING TODDLER CAN GET INTO SO EASILY?
Jesus Christ the derp is thick today.
The zoo is 100 fucking percent at fault, which is only mitigated (kinda sorta) by them making the right choice in a horrible situation that should not have happened... a situation that arose because of their fucking negligence.
Christ.
When animals tear each other limb from limb ut is usually for food. Fighting over dominance tends to be less lethal.... mind you that varies from species to species.To quote Rush Limbaugh (cough, cough): Animals don't have rights. There is no Constitution for wildlife. Look at what they do to each other in the jungle - they tear each other limb from limb. This is not to mean that humans can't or shouldn't care for them or safeguard a species. But we mustn't forget what the Bible says - that God gave man dominion over all living things. (Cough, cough).
We are the creators of all value. Right vs wrong, good vs evil, worthwhile vs worthless: all made up by us. Without us there's no morality, no ethics, no value judgement. We made it all up.When animals tear each other limb from limb ut is usually for food. Fighting over dominance tends to be less lethal.... mind you that varies from species to species.
Whether or not you like it, animals are property that exist to benefit humans.
Excellent post, I agree with everything you stated.1)Zoos should not exist in the first place. Animals such as tigers, elephants, lions, and gorillas should not be prisoned for the entertainment of humans. They should be roaming free. This would not have happened if zoos were banned.
2)The zoo was negligent for allowing the possibility of a child entering the habitat. There should have been a secondary barrier. I've seen this kind of stupidity before. One time, I was at Niagara Falls, and a child around 9 years old was sitting dangerously on the fence around the Falls in front of her parents. Had she toppled over, she would have rolled down the cliff and into the Falls.
3)The parents were possibly negligent. The father has a long criminal history. If properly supervised, this young child may not have fallen in.
4)The child is at fault for wandering away and falling in. Had the law of natural selection been allowed to be enforced, this child, who strayed from his parents and safety, and recklessly entered a dangerous, unknown area, would never have survived and his genes for dangerous behaviour would not be allowed to survive.
5)The zoo needed to take immediate action, but a tranquilizer gun should have been the first choice, with the gun ready for immediate action thereafter in case the gorilla reacted violently.
Either way, the gorilla was the victim of human stupidity from:
a)A society that prisons animals for their entertainment
b)Zoo officials that failed to eliminate a potential saftety hazard
c)Idiotic parents that allowed a todlder to be near a dangerous situation unsupervised
d)A child whose recklessness would have ensured its own demise in a natural setting
e)Zoo workers who did not consider using non lethal force to take down the gorilla
Animals are neither guilty nor innocent.I've avoided reading this thread till now.
The loss of the gorilla is a tragedy of epic proportions. The animal did not deserve to be shot. He had done nothing to warrant it. The zoo officials were simply covering their asses to avoid possible legal issues should the kid have been hurt.
In my opinion, there are billions of humans on this planet. Too many in fact. There are only a few thousand gorillas.
The gorilla was innocent in all of this.
No, this animal was an innocent victim of stupid people.Animals are neither guilty nor innocent.
Fuuuuuuuuuuck LimbaughTo quote Rush Limbaugh (cough, cough): Animals don't have rights. There is no Constitution for wildlife. Look at what they do to each other in the jungle - they tear each other limb from limb. This is not to mean that humans can't or shouldn't care for them or safeguard a species. But we mustn't forget what the Bible says - that God gave man dominion over all living things. (Cough, cough).
No animal is ever guilty of anything. No animal is ever innocent, either. They're animals--the concept of guilt and innocence doesn't apply to them. They don't know right from wrong, they don't have morals, they don't have ethics. They aren't people.No, this animal was an innocent victim of stupid people.
But if it makes it easier for you to comprehend, the people who killed him are guilty of destroying one of God's magnificent and beautiful creatures.
Your right about the fence, Its the design that put some responsibility in the public to stay out, some responsibility is too much responsibility when dealing with an endangered species. To protect the animals the zoo cant rely on the publics responsibility, those enclosures should be impenetrable.No animal is ever guilty of anything. No animal is ever innocent, either. They're animals--the concept of guilt and innocence doesn't apply to them. They don't know right from wrong, they don't have morals, they don't have ethics. They aren't people.
It's possible to talk about guilt here -- that gorilla was somebody's property, and now their property has been destroyed. Who is responsible for that destruction of property? It wasn't the zookeepers who shot the gorilla--they were acting correctly to save the life of the child. I think we can talk about whether the people who designed the fence, wether the parents, etc., were negligent in a way that resulted in traumatizing the child and the destruction of the zoo's property.