Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Thursday, February 09, 2012

Ringling’s Baby Elephant “Training”


Ringling Bros & Barnum and Bailey circus is coming to Salisbury’s Wicomico Youth and Civic Center Feb. 9th. Ringling Brothers has an appalling track record of animal abuse. The mistreatment of animals performing in their shows has been well documented over the years by reputable organizations. This past November, the USDA fined Ringling Brothers $270,000 for violating the Animal Welfare Act – the largest amount ever assessed against animal exhibitors. They have received numerous fines for animal welfare violations prior to this most recent one.

Representatives from the circus visited two schools in Wicomico County recently-Pemberton Elementary and North Salisbury Elementary. Both schools hosted supposed “curriculum-based” assemblies. Ringling Brothers aggressively markets its show to school age children because children are a captive audience. They use schools to target students as unwitting customers- the ulterior motive is to sell tickets. These reading or science “shows” are a feel-good strategy of getting into the schools. Children naturally love animals and Ringling Brothers knows this. If children in Wicomico County knew how Ringling Brothers treated animals, you couldn’t drag most of them to a circus. It is no longer a secret what abuses occur in the training of circus animals, and what they endure during their lives. This information is readily available, from multiple sources; Wicomico County School District, as well as anyone else, can research Ringling Brothers’ practices and reputation.

Elephants and other circus animals suffer daily physical and psychological abuse. No elephant or other animal willingly stands on its head or performs humiliating tricks. They do this because they are afraid of being hurt if they don’t perform a stunt. Before animals perform in front of audiences, abuses have already taken place, including: confining living conditions - sometimes only allowing a few feet of space in which to move, being chained or restrained when not performing, cramped traveling conditions over long distances and questionable medical care. Feeding practices are sometimes unsanitary, and some animals are forced to perform even though they are unfit or injured.

Animals suffer beatings, whippings, electric-shock punishment and jabbings with bull hooks (instruments of torture resembling fireplace pokers). Baby elephants are taken away from their mothers at a young age, sometimes while still nursing, and are victims of brutal training (see photo). In addition to physical abuse, animals such as elephants are denied their natural instincts to form relationships or socialize with other elephants. It is a horrific existence.

Elephants can live up to 60 years or longer in the wild. Just in the past few weeks, a 30-year-old male elephant, retiring to a PAWS (Performing Animals Welfare Society) sanctuary in California, had to be euthanized after only 14 months of freedom. He performed for 28 years for Ringling Brothers. He couldn't get up from the ground and there was nothing the veterinarians in the sanctuary could do for him. He suffered from severe arthritis-the condition either occurred from or was aggravated by all the years of mistreatment and abuse in a Ringling Brothers circus.

Those seeking more information about animal abuse in circuses can visit multiple websites for information. Below are three of them: Born Free-an animal advocacy group, Wildlife Advocacy Project, and the Animal Welfare Institute - (left side of their homepage has Asian Elephant info, including case media, which documents all the legal cases against circuses-the fine mentioned previously by USDA against Ringling being the most recent).

The circus isn’t fun, educational, or “conservation.” We should teach children to respect animals. Please don’t attend any circus that uses animal acts.

Thank you,
Animal Advocates of the Eastern Shore
http://www.aaotes.org/

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

I never have & never will take my son to a circus that includes animals.

Sherry said...

Joe I'm so glad to see your post on this. It has been a problem for so long and people either don't know or don't care. Hopefully as people are made aware this horror will end. Again I thank you.

Anonymous said...

I remeber taking my son to the Wringling Brothers Circus in Baltimore about 15 years ago in Baltimore. I had gone to the circus as a child and thought it would be fun to take my child as well. It was soooo sad. Just watching the elephants being paraded around the civic center opened my eyes. Here are these huge majestic creatures being confined in areas that they do not belong. I don't care how well they say that they are treated...their captivity is not right. I vowed that day never to take any of my children to a circus. I explained my thoughts on this to the kids and they never asked or wanted to go either. Same goes for the whales at Sea World.

Anonymous said...

The only place wild animals belong is in the wild.Humans are the intruders.

#despicable said...

I never realized how awful the animals were treated until I saw the videos. I have went to the circus several times and enjoyed it. I realized the animals were in captivity but I never thought of it as being a bad thing as long as they were treated well. The fact that they aren't absolutely kills me. Why have an animal at all if you treat it badly? Those animals are helpless creatures who have nowhere else to go. They are abused day in and day out. They lives their lives in fear of being hurt if they don't perform as they should. Never having known any of this before I can say I will not be returning to the circus again.

Anonymous said...

My apologies about the Baltimore typo in the 10:17 comment.

Anonymous said...

10:52 Geez, humans are intruders? Where are we supposed to go?

Anonymous said...

The elephant in the picture looks too young to be away from his mother. Is that stick some kind of a taser?

Anonymous said...

7:46-The circuses take baby elephants away from their mothers at a young age. They start "training" early-sometimes while babies are still nursing. Trainers that have left circuses and blown the whistle on what goes on say the babies scream and are traumatized. What you are asking about isn't a taser, but a bullhook (looks like a big fireplace poker). It is used to poke the elephants-it stabs them. It's a common tool for training. I don't know how people can do this to a living creature.

Anonymous said...

I don't understand why anyone would want to go to a circus in the first place. It's boring as heck.