Posted on 06/01/2016 7:02:14 AM PDT by Morgana
Over Memorial Day weekend, the internet has been exploding with comments, articles, and rants related to the death of Harambe, the 17-year-old silverback gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo.
While the entire situation was harrowing, terrifying, and tragic, what many of these vocalized opinions reveal about our culture is infinitely troubling.
Theres not a legitimate debate over whether the little boy who crawled and fell into Harambes habitat would have died if the gorilla hadnt been shot. CNN reported:
Officials made the decision to shoot Harambe because the boy was in imminent danger. They feared a tranquilizer would take too long to kick in, and the dart may have agitated the gorilla.
There was nobody getting that baby back from that gorilla no one was taking him, Hollifield [an eyewitness] said.
Jack Hanna, world-renowned zookeeper and director emeritus of the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium stated that he agrees 1,000 percent' with the zoos actions.
They made the correct decision. Matter of fact, its a millisecond decision, Hanna told CBS This Morning Monday. All of us are sorry. Were all, in the zoo world, heartfelt for this whole thing but thank goodness a human being is alive today because of the decision that the zoo made.
And, very simply, thats exactly what this entire situation came down to: to save a human life or not to save a human life. Notably, if the zoo had chosen to not shoot Harambe, and he had killed the boy, he would have had to be euthanized anyway. This wasnt going to end well for the gorilla, period.
But far more than an unfortunate incident or a tragic event that could have been even more tragic, Harambes death has revealed a number of troubling things about the way too many in our culture think:
1. Animal life is revered while human life is discarded.
@ReportUK Yeah, Those parents should be sent to the electric chair IMHO, and a gorilla put in charge of the power lever. #Justice4Harambe
Classified (@darnstadium) May 30, 2016
I CANNOT believe people r concerned about that BRAT who intentionally disobeyed the rules&got that gorgeous gorilla killed #Justice4Harambe
Azfinktersezwut? (@azfinktersezwut) May 30, 2016
They killed a caring gorilla and let a unfit mother live smh #Justice4Harambe
RalphLo Kj (@PoloRalph_23) May 30, 2016
Author and mom blogger at The Busy Mom, Heidi St. John, explained this priority problem well:
The loss of the gorillas life is tragicbut in this upside-down world, we seem to be placing a higher value on the life of an animal than we do on our own children. We want to judge the zoo and the mother for taking the life of the gorillanevermind that it was necessary to save the life of the child.
But we dont care about the child, do we? Not really.
125,000 human beings are murdered EVERY DAY through abortion, with a negligible number of people speaking on their behalf, but a gorilla is killed to protect the life of a child, and 236,000 people rush to his defense. All I can do is sit here and shake my head.
21% of all US pregnancies end in abortion. One gorilla is killed to protect a child and we want to crucify the parents instead of being grateful that the boy is not dead or terribly injured.
The problem with revering lost animal life over lost human life was further exacerbated by the fact that the internet was raging over Memorial Day weekend a time to mourn and remember the human soldiers who have lost their lives fighting for our freedom.
2. A child should die for the mistakes of the parent.
Taken at face value, this statement is incredibly troubling. Since when have we as a society believed it is right to execute one person for the mistakes, neglect, errors, or crimes of another? Just because (if) the boys mother was neglectful or downright careless in her parenting, should her son have been left to die a violent, drawn-out death? Apparently, a good number think so.
I'm far from being a tree-hugger, but lowland gorillas are endangered and stupid people aren't.
Most disturbing part: I suspect many more emotional about killing of #Harambe than would have been if child killed. https://t.co/0h2hqUoRL3
Wesley J. Smith (@forcedexit) May 31, 2016
And yet, this thinking is hardly different from the thinking that leads us to believe a child should be aborted if her father is a rapist. Or that a child should suffer through a violent, drawn-out death because her parents committed the human error of forgetting the condom.
3. Theres a very real sentiment of disdain for people with children.
The mother of the boy who went into Harambes enclosure has been berated over and over online, particularly by those who werent there and didnt see exactly what happened. Bunny Laditan, author of The Honest Toddler, wrote an insightful Facebook post about the near hatred for parents who make a mistake or who allow their children to misbehave in any way. (You can read it in full here.)
Has anyone else noticed that the need to criticize parents has reached fever pitch? At this point its almost pure hatred. It feels like theres a very real sentiment of disdain for people with children. I dont know where it came from, but I feel it growing and picking up speed every day.
Parents are expected to be faultless, perfect, to make sure their children are seen and not heard, not be too protective (helicopter parents, smothering mothers), but at the same time, not let their children run wild and disturb the important, adults-only precious environment. Anyone whose children step out of line from being just objects to be admired or a source of entertainment, to children, are immediately castigated. I think it says a lot about society that the group of people most loathed are the ones caring for the most vulnerable.
4. Our sense of justice is acutely misdirected.
There are already at least 80 petitions circulating for Harambe, and some people are making Justice for Harambe t-shirts, and tweeting about #JusticeforHarambe. And while we can mourn for an animal, seeking justice for a gorilla is not on par with seeking peaceful justice for humans something few of us actively do.
Where are the t-shirts made by these same people for this human twin and for this baby boy (or this one)? Just after aborting him, the abortionist exclaimed, Its a baby! and yet, most of us go on with our daily lives without expressing outrage over abortion and without sharing the truth of its tragedy with our friends.
Lets change that today.
****TWEET IMAGES ON LINK*****
How many dead in Chicago over the Holiday weekend?
No one cares.
There is a small but very vocal group of people who place an animal's life above a human's, but they are a minority.
Was it not something like 60 dead this past weekend? One a 15 year old girl? Then again that’s a Democrat ran town so, “what difference does it make?”. Had it been 60 gorillas we’d be talking about it this same time next year.
What kind of wine goes with gorilla?
According to http://heyjackass.com/ 75 were shot, 7 died.
Three times as many shot as in the previous two years, but the number of dead roughly the same.
I’m sick of this story. A boy was in serious jeopardy of being mortally wounded and the threat, an animal was shot. End of story.
Sigh... the gorilla DID NOT MAUL THE BOY nor did it appear that it intended to, up to the point that it died.
It was other elements of the situation that put pressure upon it. The zoo might have been rather embarrassed that critters, of human or otherwise ilk, could so easily get into the gorilla exhibit. Getting the boy from even a friendly gorilla might have taken more time than anyone wanted, given that the boy had suffered a 15 foot fall. (How do you explain “emergency” to a great ape?)
I wish people were no worse than that gorilla, sometimes. We’d have a nicer society. Gorillas may be violent sometimes by instinct — but it takes a human to sin.
Co-worker said she saw on FB (wouldn’t know as I’m not on it) that someone posted “I think silverback gorillas are endangered and kids aren’t. They should’ve shot the kid.”
Yes, but the media agrees with them so this story goes on and on and on.
Coconut of course
#BLM... The most sardonic hashtag, EVAH!
Society murdered Socrates.
The primate has great company.
(How do you explain “emergency” to a great ape?)
Actually there could have been a move for that. Send in a woman zookeeper to take the boy, which Harambe well could have just handed over to her. Covered under the sniper, of course, in case the gorilla DID get violent. But there would have been a chance to save the gorilla. And it would prove that gorillas care not a whit for the modern madness known as gender neutrality.
millions of babies murdered. Who cares?
Grabbing the boy by the foot and rapidly dragging him 20 feet through the water doesn't count?
This event didn’t deserve the wall-to-wall 24/7 news coverage that it got. The only reason for the coverage was to divide people into warring groups.
The animal rights crowd against the humans. The people who think the mother is guilty of gross negligence and is to blame for the whole incident. The groups that think the zoo is responsible for not building better fences and want to sue it.
“Covered under the sniper, of course,”
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The Friday Silliness Thread started earlier this week.
If you are serious, I feel sorry for you.
Don’t worry, before they sent him to the big crematorium in the sky, they took whatever sperm they could. I’m sure they have a fridge full of his sperm. That’s what zoos are about.....M O N E Y......big bucks.
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