What a kind prison guard hand feeding her slave who lives in a tiny prison cell performing tricks to make the prison rich and the prisoner absolutely miserable!!!
@claytonpatrick77622 жыл бұрын
@@janetdonaldson2632 that's very rude for you to say they love them very and you can see that in videos.
@janetdonaldson26322 жыл бұрын
@@claytonpatrick7762 my statement was not to take literally. The underlying meaning of my post is to say how the marine park officials have in reality forced these beautiful orcas into a cement prison to live a painful and sad life. Orcas prisoners and marine park officials are the prison wardens.
Who the heck do we think we are to stand on the nose of a creature that should be free?
@MrJm3232 жыл бұрын
Man. Masters of nature, so impressive that we've actually created and detonated atomic bombs, put our foot on an extraterrestial body (the Moon), and sent a probe beyond our solar system and have it take the most impressive "selfie" of our home planet ("the pale blue dot" image) -- a probe which may be our lasting monument to any other conceptual level cognition creature out there in the universe who also has the intelligence to understand what they've encountered and read and listen and view our golden records and plaques (which tell them about us and where we lived). ....The orcas (and dolphins and whales)? Impressive as these creatures are, they -- like other higher mammals which lack the CONCEPTUAL level of cognition -- live their lives in cycles: hunting and eating, mating, migrating, etc. and doing the exact same life pattern from one year to the next. They DON'T choose and make plans and pursue careers, they don't accumulate knowledge and pass it on to future generations, they don't grasp deep principles of nature or philosophically ponder of the nature of life and the world they live in, etc.. ...They don't aspire to "freedom" -- because such values only apply to conceptual level beings (and only those with a modicum of self-esteem). Obviously these orcas don't mind the games humans play with them (as long as their primary obsession -- food -- is provided). They could easily kill their trainers but rarely do. They could easily just refrain from doing the tricks. I have never heard of any marine park management starving or abusing a whale for not doing tricks. ...And, neither have you. It would be perfectly possible to release an orca back into the wild. This was done with Keiko -- the orca forgotten by "animal liberationists" everywhere, since Keiko clearly preferred human companionship over re-integrating with any orca pod.