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Do you like bears?

  • Thread starter Thread starter peeonme
  • Start date Start date
No. The promotion of them as cute or lovable is a dangerous thing in our modern world where urbanized children and youth have no idea of the danger a bear represents. Their species is a threat to us and we to them.

Polar bears would eat a human in a heartbeat.

Black bears regularly stalk humans in wild habitat, parks, and will eat a human if they can kill one.

Brown bears and grizzlies usually do not see humans as food but will kill out of instinct, fear, or because cubs are nearby.

In nature films, bears are funny, bumbly, playful, canine-like. In reality, a grizzly can run down a deer. Surviving a bear attack is a rarity. Their claws are huge.
 
I don't think I would wanna get close to a bear those are dangerous animals maybe see them behind a cage that would be fine
 
Now, now. Let's not go talking about facts. You can prove anything with facts!

I remember that as well, it's odd how big fuzzy, cuddly animal can be so dangerous. I enjoy watching them...from a distance.
 
The bear in Raton, NM was only estimated to be about 100 pounds, and I didn't actually see him. However, he was one of at least three bears that week that were marauding in that town. It was during the drought, in 2015 or 2016, I think.

In the same neighborhood there on the edge of the foothills, a bear had tried to climb in a kitchen window with the woman in the kitchen while he was trying. Another larger bear was shot the morning after the younger bear had walked all over my car and torn the fender off.

Bengal tigers are "cuddly" too, so there's that.

The day after I left and returned to Albuquerque, another large bear bit a teenage girl through a tent as she camped out in her father's yard during a family reunion there in Raton. He was the school superintendent, if I remember the article correctly.

Imagine that. You're asleep in a tent on your home's lawn, and a bear tries to eat you through the tent wall.

Not cute to imagine at all.

We see them too often animated or in cartoons. That really plays against the reality. Home videos may show them raiding a bird feeder or eating dog food. But they are predators, not mere scavengers. A child playing in the yard, or an adult working and not paying attention or being alert is in danger.

From a natural perspective, I want bears to be in the environment just like I do panthers and wolves, but they often cannot share space with humans, and must be removed or put down once they become bold.
 
We have more to worry about cougars picking off the young men than we do bears :lol:
 
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Yes, but only as cartoon characters.
 
No. The promotion of them as cute or lovable is a dangerous thing in our modern world where urbanized children and youth have no idea of the danger a bear represents. Their species is a threat to us and we to them.

As much as I love Bears, this is true and I think it is true for a lot of wild animals in general. I think society (mainly the internet) puts out a perception of a lot of these animals that give people the wrong idea about them.

I was camping in a Trailer with one of my friends when I was younger and there was a Bear outside scrounging around, definitely one of the scariest moments of my life.
 
^ Petting an adult wild animal in a confined space is SUCH an irresponsible thing for Inside Edition to have aired. No naturalist would encourage that. If he'd been bitten, they'd never show that, hence the filtering of animals' images in the public media.

Animals often freeze out of fear or uncertainty, but can panic and attack.


As much as I love Bears, this is true and I think it is true for a lot of wild animals in general. I think society (mainly the internet) puts out a perception of a lot of these animals that give people the wrong idea about them.

I was camping in a Trailer with one of my friends when I was younger and there was a Bear outside scrounging around, definitely one of the scariest moments of my life.

Don't think it all began with Al Gore. This cutesification of wild animals lies more at the feet of Disney and other big studios who featured animals in personified depictions or simply edited for cute shots. A bear shredding a lamb or bunny doesn't sell.
 
Love them, particularly one who saved me from a house fire and a police shootout when i was on the run in Canada.
 
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