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karen roseme
Mountain climber
san diego
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Topic Author's Reply - Dec 31, 2013 - 12:35pm PT
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great links Nature!
You might want to read them Ron.
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Reilly
Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:36pm PT
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Ron, I am quite aware of all of that. I just don't believe in slavery.
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:38pm PT
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A perfect example of the lies of SeaWorld is to look into the Morgan Story.
She was rescued by SeaWorld and rehabilitated. This animal could easily be released back to her pod. But SeaWorld is keeping her at loro parque - mostly likely to increase their genetic diversity for their breading program.
Free Morgan
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:43pm PT
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you said you saw it. that's fine. but in my opinion to be a part of this discussion in a constructive way it's a must see.
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:47pm PT
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it has nothing to do with caring. That's an emotion.
it's a factual conversation and that movie is loaded with FACTS that until the movie didn't enter into this conversation. Either come equipped with the facts and discuss or act on emotion. I'm choosing the former.
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:51pm PT
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I'll just give up and get back to karen. I'm to busy to explain myself and you're not getting what i'm trying to say. and i'm sure that's my fault.
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:54pm PT
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no... i get it DAD! I just never listened to you so why should I start now?!?!?111169
;)
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:56pm PT
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Lolita (L25) is another story worth looking in to. She could be reintroduced to L-pod and they would accept and remember her. And they took her captive 43 years ago.
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 12:57pm PT
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It use to say on Tilikums wiki page:
Occupation: Captive Slave
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nature
climber
Boulder, CO
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Dec 31, 2013 - 02:05pm PT
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The Cove. It won an academy award for best documentary. It describes the capture and slaughter of small cetaceans in Taiji Japan. It's going on right now. The director lives here in Boulder. I met him on Isla Mujeres over the summer. After the floods I went over to help him out (they got pummeled by the water). Some big things are planned for 2014 both with what Louie has planned as well as what the Sea Shepherds are up to.
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rectorsquid
climber
Lake Tahoe
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Dec 31, 2013 - 03:10pm PT
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Whales and dolphins are highly intelligent animals who want and need to live in complex social groups. In captivity they will usually have been separated from their families, often in cruel hunts and some when they are very young.
Dogs are pack animals. How many people complaining about this also have a single dog that sits at home alone all day while they are out on the picket-line complaining about animals in captivity?
Dave
P.S. I just got back from the San Diego Safari Park. No one is complaining about the Rhino's in captivity because no one made a documentary about them. This thread is another example of people being sheep and following whatever "save the _" fad that comes along.
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rectorsquid
climber
Lake Tahoe
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Dec 31, 2013 - 03:13pm PT
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...willingness...
If it is "training," then it is not "willingness." Informed cooperation would require us having to explain what we want and then the animals would use logic and reason to decide to act or not. "Training" is where we give treats to the animal each time it does what we want, and it eventually learns complex actions because... wait for it... treats are yummy!
Dave
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canyoncat
Social climber
SoCal
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Dec 31, 2013 - 03:22pm PT
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I always like to look up any charitable organization to ascertain how much good the do-gooder is actually doing. Oceanic Preservation Society's form 990 was quite the eye opener. I'm sure Louis means the ocean well, but factually he's paying himself $200,000 a year (in addition to car, restaurant, and other expense write offs) and the only "donation" they made at all in 2011 was $100 (it didn't say to whom). They do make nice movies though.
The Cove and Blackfish were very good IMO.
I dunno, I'd like to see more actual conservation efforts besides making movies, and I also dislike the idea that they think associating with Paul Watson is a good idea.
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karen roseme
Mountain climber
san diego
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Topic Author's Reply - Jan 1, 2014 - 10:04am PT
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Hey Ron,
I think that negative review you found was written by a Sea World stock holder!
**Ten Things You Didn’t Know About SeaWorld
They are forced to perform tricks and live in tiny enclosures.
Say NO to SeaWorld and refuse to buy a ticket.
Orcas that were at SeaWorld before 1972 were likely kidnapped from their ocean homes. For example, Tilikum, a 32-year-old orca, was captured at the age of 2 by a marine "cowboy." Tilikum wasn't taken from his natural environment because he was injured—instead, he was torn away from his family against his will and confined to a small concrete tank for a hefty profit.
A scientific study by Newcastle University found that dolphins in close proximity to humans experience extreme stress, "preventing them from resting, feeding or nurturing their young." Despite these findings, SeaWorld continues to allow park guests to swim and touch dolphins at its Discovery Cove location in Orlando, Florida.
In 1965, the first-ever orca show was performed by a female orca named Shamu at SeaWorld San Diego. Shamu, like Tilikum, was kidnapped before the Marine Mammal Protection Act was enacted in1972—during Shamu's capture, her mother was shot with a harpoon and killed before the young orca's very eyes by a marine "cowboy" named Ted Griffin. Griffin's partner, Don Goldsberry, later worked for SeaWorld and was assigned to bring orcas into the park. He continued slaughtering orcas, and at one point, he hired divers to slit open the bellies of four orcas, fill them with rocks, put anchors around their tails, and sink them to the bottom of the ocean so that their deaths would not be discovered.
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karen roseme
Mountain climber
san diego
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Topic Author's Reply - Jan 1, 2014 - 10:11am PT
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I love dogs too and think people who leave them at home all day alone should not get to have them
I am so grateful the film was made so the cause can gain momentum and possibly get results.
Here are 7 more things you didn't know about SeaWorld.
In nature, orcas choose their own mates. But at SeaWorld, orcas are forced to breed on a regular basis. Male orcas are trained to float on their backs, and their trainers masturbate them to collect their sperm. Females are artificially inseminated and forced to breed at a much younger age than they would in nature. Katina was forced to breed when she was only 9 years old (at least five years earlier than she would have naturally bred in the wild). Now she is used as a virtual breeding machine and is even being inbred with her own sons.
SeaWorld's corporate incident log contains reports of more than 100 incidents of orca aggression at its parks, often resulting in injuries to humans and even causing one death by extensive internal bleeding.
Orcas in the wild have an average life expectancy of 30 to 50 years—their estimated maximum life span is 60 to 70 years for males and 80 to 90 for females. The median age of orcas in captivity is only 9.
In captivity, all male orcas have collapsed dorsal fins as adults, which is a sign of an unhealthy orca. SeaWorld claims that this condition is common and natural for all orcas. However, collapsed dorsal fins are caused by the unnatural environment of captivity and are rarely seen in the wild. Only 1 to 5 percent of male orcas in some populations (and none in others) have fully collapsed dorsal fins.
SeaWorld has a long history of pressuring authorities. Following a 2006 attack by an orca on a trainer at SeaWorld in San Diego, the California division of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration concluded that it was "only a matter of time" before someone was killed while interacting with the orcas. However, the agency withdrew these findings after being pressured by SeaWorld. A further investigation into these attacks could have prevented injuries and deaths.
On January 11, the USDA issued an official warning to SeaWorld San Antonio for its "repeated failure to provide drain covers that are securely fastened in order to minimize the potential risk of animal entrapment"—a violation that resulted in the death of a sea lion.
SeaWorld confines whales and dolphins—who often swim up to 100 miles a day in the wild—to tanks that, to them, are the size of a bathtub.
SeaWorld presents itself as a family establishment full of fun activities. However, these "fun activities" harm animals physically and emotionally. Please say NO to SeaWorld and its enslavement of animals by refusing to buy a ticket and asking the marine park to release these animals to sanctuaries.
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couchmaster
climber
pdx
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*RIGHT ON KAREN!! I agree. I was so inspired by your post that I kicked my dog out of the house and said: "LIVE FREE PUP". The damned thing has been walking aimlessly around the house ever since despite the send off we had which also included playing the song "Born Free" repetitively. Now we've been relegated to ducking behind the couch and keeping the lights off pretending to not be home when she gets close, but have been unsuccessful in our efforts so far to rehabilitate the dog and get her to start chasing cats, voles and squirrels for dinner. I said: "GO FORTH AND LIFE FREE LIKE A COYOTE". What's wrong with freedom?
Not sure what to do now, but this ain't working. ................Help!?
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karen roseme
Mountain climber
san diego
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Topic Author's Reply - Jan 1, 2014 - 12:02pm PT
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I with you locker!
“SeaWorld likes to claim their shows are educational, but how educational is it watching a sea lion bounce a ball off its nose, an Orca splash an audience, or a dolphin dragging a trainer around a swimming pool? Come on, we have plenty of great nature documentaries that are truly educational. Observing sea life in its natural state is awe-inspiring and much more educational for children and adults. Never buy a ticket!”
—Ty Ganske, Austin, Texas
“I will never forget the dolphin "petting" tank where you buy fish to feed them and pet them. ALL of their noses were badly injured and scarred from abuse. I wondered first, what kind of person injures a dolphin purposefully, then I thought, what kind of place allows dolphins to be abused by its patrons? We have not been back since.”
—Dean Parsons, Upland, California
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