Posted on 02/25/2010 11:26:14 AM PST by Free ThinkerNY
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Trainers will continue to work with a killer whale that grabbed one of their colleagues and dragged her underwater, killing her, but SeaWorld said Thursday it is reviewing its procedures.
People lined up to get into the Orlando park a day after the whale named Tilikum killed veteran trainer Dawn Brancheau as a horrified audience watched.
Tilikum had been involved in two previous deaths, including a Canadian trainer dragged under water by him and two others whales in 1991.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
“It kills people or mammals?”
I prob should’ve said ‘strictly people or basically speaking, mammals’.
Where did I imply that the animals should be killed pre-emptively? Everything I've stated has been in the context of reacting to an actual fatality. I agree that we cannot and should not try to mitigate every possible risk. That would be like choosing to apply the logic in the movie I, Robot on ourselves. (Wherein robots, charged with protecting humans, try to take that to its logical conclusion of enslaving humans to keep them from doing anything dangerous.)
yes they did, my jaw dropped....i looked at my wife and said how in the hell can they report that so many hours after the fact when its been reported by others interviewing eyewitnesses that said the whale grabbed her and pulled her underwater and thrashed her around....its just unbelievable anymore...
People "in the know" dont' expect orcas to kill humans not because of anthropomorphizing them, but because of OBSERVED HISTORY. It makes no more sense to say that people should expect to be aggressivly attacked by them because it's a normal behavior, any more than it makes sense to say that people should expect bassett hounds and St. Bernards to tear mailmen, old people, and children to shreds in the same percentage proprotion as pit bulls and Rottweilers. DENYING it, indeed, is a kind of anthropomorphism.
The orca that killed this woman and the two other people before her is an aberration, not the norm. Something was abornmal in THAT orca, otherwise over the past 40-plus years that hundreds of trainers have worked around hundreds of orcas, there'd have been a LOT LOT LOT more incidents like this.
Exactly. Let him go.
He’s sired a whole bunch of offspring. With 3 human deaths on his rap sheet, why would we want that aggression passed on to animals intended for work with human trainers?
I don’t even watch the news anymore. I might occassionally see some by accident, normally in a public place, and I look around and see all the folks taking it for gospel, I wish they’d wake up.
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