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Mißhaltung von Delfinen und Orcas - The Cove [DOK]

DschaaOm

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Kam heute im Thai-TV

Die machen mobil gegen die Mißhandlung und Mißhaltung von Delfinen und Orcas in sog. Show-Becken zur Belustigung der Touris.
Mit dabei sind die Studenten der Regent's School Pattaya.
Sie rufen dazu auf solche Shows, die unter anderem auch zb im Sanctuary of Thruth stattfinden nicht mehr zu besuchen, da solche Veranstaltungen Tierquälerei seien und sich diese Shows nur durch die sehr guten Einnahmen durch Touris finanzieren und somit halten können.
Sie hoffen durch einen flächendeckenden Boykott diese Missstände endlich abzuschaffen.
Es wurden auch Petitionen an die th Regierung gestellt.

Kauft keine Tickets!



Ric Goes to Regent’s School, Thailand
October 2, 2011 by Ric O'Barry, Earth Island Institute

By Emily Kay
Love Wildlife Foundation, Thailand

Love Wildlife, ACRES of Singapore and Goldfish PLC, The Regent’s School of Pattaya’s student enterprise, displayed their wide array of merchandise as dozens strolled in to the Globe Theater for an evening of excitement, heartache and activism. Ric O’Barry, the star of the movie-documentary The Cove, through the combined efforts of the Love Wildlife Foundation and Earth Island Institute, was to give staff, students and public of Pattaya an evening they would not forget for a very long time.

The presentation began with a harrowing showing of The Cove, a movie that will move the coldest of hearts. Many tears were shed, but the beauty of the movie is that it is not all about sadness. Through the efforts of Ric O’Barry and his activist team, they have brought to light a darkened corner of a tiny fishing village of Taiji, Japan. After opening the eyes of those that want to see what happens in The Cove, many people have stood up and spoken out for the dolphins.

As the movie drew to it’s dramatic end with the climactic score echoing in the background of the theater, Ric was welcomed to an extremely well-deserved standing ovation. He clearly answered the abundance of questions asked of him by students ranging from primary school to the sixth form students in secondary, to staff and parents. Asked such questions as, “Do you agree with dolphin breeding for captivity?”, “What was SeaWorld’s reactions to The Cove?”, and “Why did you spend ten years training dolphins to now be dedicating your life to saving them?”, Ric was unfettered and detailed in his answers.

The Q&A ended on what Ric stated to be his favorite question of the evening: “What can I do to help?” A question I have no doubt was asked by many in the audience.

After presenting the school with his book, with Nancy from Love Wildlife giving the school a copy of The Cove DVD, Ric spent the next forty-five minutes signing autographs and taking his time to answer individual’s more in-depth, personal questions. Each person in that theater left having learned something new, sad yet they were left with a desire to make a difference and spread the word.

For me, having asked Ric, “Do you ever feel like you are fighting a losing battle?”, his answer was the simplest and most obvious of all, and one of which I had not yet thought about: “It isn’t about winning.”

http://dolphinproject.org/blog/post/ric-goes-to-regents-school-thailand

bild_002_453987.jpg
Foto geborgt von @Raini - THX



Die DOKU The Cove




The Cove is a 2009 documentary film that analyzes and questions Japan's dolphin hunting culture. It was awarded the (2010) Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

The film is a call to action to halt mass dolphin kills; change Japanese fishing practices; and to inform and educate the public about the risks, and increasing hazard, of mercury poisoning from dolphin meat. The film is told from an ocean conservationist's point of view.

The film was directed by former National Geographic photographer Louie Psihoyos. Portions were filmed secretly during 2007 using underwater microphones and high-definition cameras disguised as rocks http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cove_(film)

You can actively participate in raising awareness.. Visit http://www.savejapandolphins.org/

This video is not uploaded for commercial purposes but solely for educational purposes in the hope of sparing dolphin and whale lifes by exposing the monstrocities commited by a few. Save our planet, save our oceans. Share this video with your friends and family. Together we stand strong and maybe together we can stop this senseless killing of intelligent beings, born by the same mother of us all, Earth.
 

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DschaaOm

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Es gibt aber auch kritische Stimmen, die die Tatsachen in "The Cove" widerlegen.


Ob die Studenten der Regent's School aber nur einseitig informiert werden und sich somit ungeprüft "einspannen lassen", bleibt wohl ein Rätsel...






http://www.thepetitionsite.com/8/the-truth-about-Japan-dolphins/

On March 7th the movie "The Cove" won an Oscar for best documentary. The documentary details the slaughter of thousands of dolphins each year as part of a drive fishery that takes place in a remote cove in Taiji, Japan. "The Cove" is a compelling story; after all, who wouldn't support such a noble cause complete with horrific injustice and a remorseful hero turned from a life of evil to save dolphins?

If this sounds like a screenplay for a fiction thriller, that's because in more ways than one, it is.

Although the slaughter of dolphins in Taiji is very real, much about star Ric O'Barry's past and the reasons behind the Taiji slaughter portrayed in "The Cove" are far from fact. The movie introduces O'Barry as the original "Flipper" trainer turned anti-captivity in 1970 after a dolphin on the TV series allegedly committed suicide in his arms.

Ricou Browning was the creator and Producer of "Flipper." It was Browning and not O'Barry that trained the first Flipper dolphins. And according to Miami Seaquarium, Kathie's (Flipper's) death came at the end of long illness, her death was not suicide.

As recently as 1989, despite his supposed epiphany, O'Barry continued to seek employment in a marine life facility. From a 1993 article in "Animal People" Captain Paul Watson wrote: "It was only after [Steve] Wynn turned down O'Barry's application for a trainer's job [1989] that O'Barry became critical of the Mirage".

O'Barry is also one of an infamous few charged with animal abuse and fined under the US Marine Mammal Protection Act for his role in the 1999 death of "Buck", a U.S. Navy dolphin.

Does O'Barry's contradictory past mean "The Cove's" message is not valid? Certainly not. Few could willingly ignore the violent slaughter of one of the world's most popular animals; and this is exactly what the creators of "The Cove" are relying on.




O'Barry and producer Louie Psihoyos hijack the film's message to promote a not-so-hidden agenda of anti-zoo that deviates from the real reason behind the slaughter in Taiji. "The Cove" deliberately portrays a sinister link between the killings in Taiji and U.S. marine life parks that does not exist.

At "http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSjCFWjRmgM&feature=related#"]18:49[/URL] minutes into the movie, O'Barry states "[about marine life parks] ... a multibillion dollar industry, and all of these captures helped create the largest slaughter of dolphins on the planet". At that precise moment, we see the entrance to Dolphin Cove, a marine life park located in Key Largo, Florida. Ironically, Dolphin Cove Key Largo does not have any dolphins from the Taiji slaughter, nor has it ever. Dolphin Cove is not alone.




According to the Alliance of Marine Mammal Parks and Aquariums, an association that represents most major marine life parks in the western hemisphere, none of their 44 members "have or take animals from the [Taiji] drive." It has been more than three decades since any western facility brought dolphins from Taiji.

The fact is that the drive fishery in Taiji predates marine life parks by nearly 300 years. It began in 1675 as a drive fishery for the primary purpose of pest control and dolphin meat.

So why does "The Cove" claim that the slaughter is created by marine parks?

Berkley-based Earth Island Institute (EII) is behind the making of "The Cove." For the past two decades, O'Barry has acted as the henchman for EII in their campaign to gain de facto control over the marine zoological community; the same "certification" control that EII has exacted upon the tuna industry with their private "Dolphin Safe" label. "The Cove" is O'Barry and EII's latest deception in this well defined scheme, only this time they envision a "Dolphin Safe Marine Park" label as their "Oscar."




The recent SeaWorld tragedy plays right into their hands and they are downright jubilant about it. In a red carpet interview, Psihoyos cheerfully admitted that the death of trainer Dawn Brancheau at SeaWorld and the Oscar nomination combined to their benefit and described the circumstances as "the perfect storm for us."

O'Barry and Psihoyos may have their moment of fame and EII may even levy a toll on marine life parks in the process, but neither outcome will stop the slaughter of dolphins in Taiji. Much like the evolution of awareness about marine life in the United States, only education and changing values toward dolphins will stop a 335 year old cultural hunt. But then again, ending the dolphin slaughter in Taiji was never the primary intent of the Oscar winning documentary "The Cove."






Academy Award-winning documentary film "The Cove" that focuses on the dolphin hunt in Taiji, Japan, is found to contain factual errors and deliberate manipulation of facts.
 

zen

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Das sich Delphine in solchen kleinen Planschbecken wohlfühlen darf wohl tatsächlich bezweifelt werden. Artgerecht ist nur die Freiheit! Ich finde den Boykottaufruf gut.
:daume
 

DschaaOm

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Beeindruckt hat mich die hohe Zahl der Tiere, die in Ost-Asien verspeißt werden.

Auch Zoos finde ich unhuman, ääh untierisch, oder wie sagt man da?
 

musikus

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Da ich beim Segeln den Aktionsradius von Delphinen schon oft beobachten konnte, steht für mich fest:

Jede Haltung von Delphinen in Becken oder künstlichen Lagunen ist gemeine Tierquälerei. :teuflisch