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Out of curiosity does anyone know how tall the kid is?
Plenty of public buildings and places end up with strange compromises and barriers in place to stop stupid human behaviour.
The tough thing about people is that some are persistent and will overcome almost any obstacle to be able to endanger themselves. Not just toddlers.
There are people climbing radio aerials, hanging from cranes and swinging from bridge girders, when any one of them fall, people start accusing the owners of negligence.
That's not really fair.
	He's almost as adorable as Cedric The Lion.
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Everyone who supports the shooting uses this exact flawed argument.
I'm unaware of anyone out there saying "the child deserved to die and should have been made to." That's a complete straw man position. Many of us don't agree this was the "only option." I'd say it was "the only option within acceptable liability concerns on the part of the zoo."
We're talking about slaughtering a member of a species that has almost been wiped off the earth. Shooting him dead to utterly absolutely guarantee beyond any shadow of a doubt no possible harm to a single human was the "only possible option?"
It seems likely that the gorilla was shot simply because the zoo feared litigation, which it has probably got coming as the child could have died from the fall alone. The blame game involving the parents, and the zoo will probably remain an important news headline for some time.
Worth noting that at least 60 people were shot, six fatally, over the Memorial Day weekend in Chicago.
For what it's worth, Harambe was born and raised in captivity. Harambe was never a 'wild' animal.
The boy was in danger, therefore they had no choice but to kill the gorilla. I am irritated that PETA members seemed to go bat shit crazy because the gorilla had to be killed. To me it implied that PETA members would have been more satisfied if the Gorrila had lived and the child was killed.
Eventually, our experience of the natural world will include proper names for all that are left.
. . .
Stones has been in the zoo business for about 50 years and has worked with Harambe’s family since they first entered the U.S., starting with the grandparents.
“The grandparents were 4, maybe 4 1/2 or 5. I’ve seen all the babies be born, and I’ve raised Harambe from the day he was born,” Stones said.
. . .
. . .
“He was like one of my sons. He was beautiful and a true character — so mischievous and not aggressive. He would throw water on the female keepers before running back and hiding in the back of his exhibit like, ‘Ha, ha, I got you.’ He would take a keeper’s blanket and just run off. Very fun loving and so intelligent,” said the 74-year-old Stones.
. . .
“I could go in the cage with him and he would not attack me, but he might accidently kill me just by playing,” said Stones.
. . .
.In summer 1996, a rambunctious 3-year-old boy slipped away from his mother and squeezed through a barrier at the Brookfield Zoo in Illinois, plummeting more than 15 feet into a pit holding several gorillas. One of them scooped up the toddler, cradled him, carried him to paramedics -- and gained international fame.
WGN-TV posted the footage of the moment Binti Jua, a rare western lowland gorilla who was then 8 years old, picked up the boy after he fell to the concrete floor. Witnesses said Binti Jua mothered him for several minutes while toting her own 17-month-old baby on her back, according to WGN-TV.
"She picked up the boy, kind of cradling him, and walked him around," zoo spokeswoman Sondra Katzen told the Chicago Tribune back in 1996
This article references an earlier incident when a gorilla provided a child with security, returning the child to zoo staff:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...s-ago-he-was-saved-by-a-gorilla-a7060851.html
I quote:
.
Whether you believe it or not, it was the only option. The fact that the boy was alive for as long as he was enabled the animal handlers to take the shot. Whether the gorilla would have protected him, hurt him, handed him over, was impossible to determine, and as such, was a risk the zoo could not accept. And it wasn't just litigation. They boy was alive, and there was a chance of saving him. The endangered status of the species was never the question. Any time wild animals are kept in containment, there is a risk of having to put one down for a number of reasons. Threat to human lives is not the least of them.
