Saturday, February 27, 2010

ORCA UPRISING













Last night, here in Southern California, as we heard the news from Chile and narcissistically wondered where the next seismic event would occur and what the tectonic plates would do in the immediate future, we were also alerted by the eminent Munz to Alexander Cockburn’s argument that the recent killer whale problems at Sea World are essentially an orca slave revolt. I don’t always see eye to eye with Cockburn but here he makes a compelling case...

"Call him, just for now, Spartacus. He was two years old when the slavers captured him in 1982 and hauled him off to Oak Bay, near the town of Victoria, on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, in the far Canadian west. And there he met his fellow slaves, Nootka and Haida. Day after day, in slave school they learned their tricks. Day after day, they did their act for the paying customers. And then, on February 20, 1991, in the tank operated by Sealand of the Pacific, the three struck back at their captors. Okay, not Spartacus, but an orca whale – Tillikum, the one who drowned 40-year-old Dawn Brancheau last Wednesday in the Shamu tank, at SeaWorld, Orlando, after grabbing her by her ponytail. Tillikum was caught off Iceland. Nootka and Haida, both females, were seized in the Pacific. In fact, Nootka was the third orca by that name to be bought by Sealand. The first two died within a year of their capture. At that time, enslaved orcas had a life expectancy in captivity of anywhere from one to four years. These days they do a bit better. In wild waters, orcas live to be anywhere from 30 to 60. By the time of the 1991 slave revolt, Nootka III already had a couple of priors back in 1989, when she’d attacked trainers twice. Then, on Feb. 20, 1991, Keltie Byrne, a 20-year-old marine biology student, champion swimmer and part-time trainer, slipped while she was riding on the head of one of the orcas. Tillikum, Nootka and Haida took turns in dragging her beyond reach of trainers trying to hook her out with long poles.” (Click here for the rest.)

6 comments:

  1. Now if only we humans would do the same.

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  2. Ughh... Munz, are you suggesting that humans should drown the seaworld orca trainers?

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  3. Just the Landworld trainers.

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  4. Anonymous7:59 PM

    Am I the only person laughing at the name, Alexander Cockburn? Seriously... what kind of name is Cockburn?

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  5. Paddy8:09 PM

    It's Irish and pronouced Coburn,

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  6. I'm not too sure about this orca uprising, but Cockburn is of Scottish origin, however, Mr. Cockburn himself is, I believe, from Ireland.

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