Dolphins and Whales
Dark shadows caused the painful sounds of the senses, followed a super pod of 300 dolphins.
When dark-shadow-monsters blocked the way back into their travel waters with a wall of small hurting-squares, Net, 300+ terrified dolphins realized that something bad would come.
Totaly 100 highly intelligent bottlenose dolphins were stolen for captivity as performers of clowns for the entertainment of mentally underdeveloped people.
Some of these hundred abduction victims will not survive the starve-humiliation-training in the Taiji sea pens, the others will abused, psychologically broken, or slow painful die in chlorinated concrete containers.
Each dolphin who was stolen from the ocean is subject to the slavery rule of greedy business monsters...
Dolphin protection is easy - Don't buy a ticket!
Всего 100 очень умных дельфинов были украдены для развлечения умственно недоразвитых людей.
Некоторые из этих сотен жертв не переживут унижений в море Taiji, другие будут психологически сломленны или медленно болезненно умирать в хлорированных бетонных контейнерах.
Каждый дельфин, который был украден из океана становится рабом жадных бизнес монстров.
Дельфинов защитить легко - не покупайте билет!
There’s not much agriculture in the Faroe Islands, an archipelago in the North Atlantic, roughly equidistant from Norway, Iceland, and Scotland. Aside from the sheep that freely roam the fjords and a few root vegetables, the Faroese have always relied on the surrounding sea as a source of fish, seabirds, and the pilot whales they slaughter in a hunt known as the grindadráp, or grind.
"Grind,” which rhymes with wind, is Faroese for pilot whale, and can refer to the event of the whale slaughter, the whale meat, or the whales themselves. Hunting whales for food is a tradition as old as the islands have been inhabited. But in the past few decades, animal activists have taken issue with the grind, despite Faroese insistence that it is sustainable and humane.
Motherboard visited the Faroe Islands to see a grind first hand as the Faroese defend their way of life against pressure from a visiting Sea Shepherd operation.
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