NZ Jeremy. the money may go far in India, but it still cost me $15,000 to live in Sri Lanka for three months and I wasn't actively funding conservation efforts.
Since when has Sri Lanka been India..?
Jeremy get your facts right - the most dangerous job is not elephant keeping, it is deep sea crab fishing, followed by coal mining. a leash is more of a control measure than an ankus.
I assuming whatever poll you’ve got your info from didn’t take into account elephant keeping (its an obscure profession) as coal miner deaths rate about 1 in 10,000 annually... Both a leash and an ankus are no control when the animal makes up its mind it’s not going to do what it tells you too...
Were you involved in the decision making process as to what is done with the funds. Saying the money is dirty, well what a crock of ****. How much money do you think Taronga or any other zoo would make to contribute to conservation if it didn't have animals.
Of course I wasn't involved in the decision making process... Dirty was the wrong word I should have re-used tainted, I apologise... Again Jarkari you have missed my point...
Zoos are businesses as well. The managment there is hired to help the zoo make a profit for te state government.
Most of the best Zoological institutions are registered charities or run by local councils as not for profit edutainment attractions and their websites end in .org, etc...
sorry, one last thing Jeremy. does that mean any contributions to any conservation projects from Canberra's National Zoo and Aquarium and Australia Zoo (or wildlife warriors) dirty money. they also take part in public interaction with predators, or Mogo Zoo
I’m making a distinction Jarkari, are you capable of those..? These places are set up with animals in mind for better or worse not as a for profit theme park... I do think direct handling is a dangerous practice that can result in unnecessary loss of human life...
playing with white lion cubs (inbred mutants in your opinion).
Please don’t misquote me, I said white tigers are inbred and on this there can be little debate due to the fact that the only white tiger ever to be captured (Mohan, Bengal sub species) in India in 1956 was bred with a female cub of his to promote the white coated gene... There has already been a lengthy thread on white tigers...
@NZ Jeremy- Sorry you consider the money "dirty". We tried to wash it. I earlier stated that we do not recieve criticism about the program we run with the tigers. Quite simply the staff here thought it was a great opportunity to give something back to conservation and management agreed. You may look for the most sinister rationale, I guess that goes with being a cop.
I apologise again that is poor form from me, tainted is what I meant... Not a single person has a bad word to say either in person or written form..? Your exhibit must be the only un-criticised human undertaking in history... So your saying you nine or so keepers went to the executives and said, “Can we please have 1 million to give to the tigers in the wild” and they said, “Sure why not its not like were running a business here”... If that’s the case I better buy a couple of shares in Dreamworld and go and complain at the next shareholders meeting in person...
While I’m still technically a Cop, I’m on extended leave without paying to study at University but maybe I’ll never lose, as you put it, this “sinister rationale” or as I put it realism, business executives are trained for years not to spend a single cent they don't have to, it may have gone down just as you say but we'll never know to a certainty the motive, they may be as you say philanthropist tycoons with hearts of gold to who money and their targets are second to doing the right thing or is it equally likely they took the opportunity presented as something to point to if some animal libber one day gets a fire lit under them, or as justification for having them..?
OK, so maybe I am playing Devil's advocate a bit now but I think people are thinking a bit black and white here (myself included)...