PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals)
2 270 vidéos, +503 000 abonnés


Liste de lecture:
What's Wrong With the Circus? (Youtube)
Afficher la descriptionMasquer la description
Do elephants stand on their heads in the wild?

Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus is known for its long history of abusing animals. In 1929, John Ringling ordered the execution of a majestic bull elephant named Black Diamond after the elephant killed a woman who had been in the crowd as he was paraded through a Texas city. Twenty men took aim and pumped some 170 bullets into Black Diamond's body, then chopped off his bullet-ridden head and mounted it for display in Houston, Texas. Ringling's cruel treatment of animals continues today.

Elephants in Ringling's possession are chained inside filthy, poorly ventilated boxcars for an average of more than 26 straight hours—and often 60 to 70 hours at a time—when the circus travels. Even former Ringling employees have reported that elephants are routinely abused and violently beaten with bullhooks (an elephant-training tool that resembles a fireplace poker), in order to force them to perform tricks. Read more about the Ringling whistleblower who told PETA about the shocking death of a lion and the abuse of elephants in Ringling's care.

At least 29 elephants, including four babies, have died since 1992, including an 8-month-old baby elephant named Riccardo who was destroyed after he fractured his hind legs when he fell from a circus pedestal. Elephants are not the only animals with Ringling to suffer tragic deaths. In 2004, a 2-year-old lion died of apparent heatstroke while the circus train crossed the Mojave Desert.

For more, go to http://www.ringlingbeatsanimals.com.

Subscribe and never miss another video: http://www.peta.vg/g4 less


Page d'Acceuil - À propos - Ajouter votre chaine.
Partager sur :

[Version mobile] [https://www.facebook.com/listubes]
Listubes, Copyright 2024