MIAMI: SeaWorld and animal rights groups clashed on social media over the company’s treatment of orcas, which star as the main attraction at several marine parks.
The Florida-based company recently put its trainers and veterinarians on social media to respond to questions from the public amid a controversy over the orcas’ lot in captivity.
Instead, it met a storm of hostile questions, such as why “animals starve unless they perform” and why “you intentionally hire trainers with no marine biology experience.”
SeaWorld on March 31 charged that PETA and other animal rights groups had “inundated” Twitter to try to disrupt its “#AskSeaWorld” initiative.
“It’s unfortunate that these people would try to drown out thoughtful and honest answers by flooding social media with repeated questions and troll accounts,” SeaWorld said.
PETA insisted that the response had been “spontaneous and massive.”
“#AskSeaWorld backfired because people everywhere saw an opportunity to let SeaWorld know exactly what they think of the cruelty of breaking up orca families, forcing orcas to swim in circles in small concrete tanks for years, and drugging them to mask the stress and rage caused by captivity and being kept in unnatural groups or in solitary confinement, among other things,” Collen O’Brien, Peta’s senior director said.
SeaWorld admitted last year that its income had fallen in part because of campaigns by activists against the use of the killer whales in its shows.
Tesla driverless system to use updated radar technology
WASHINGTON: Electric carmaker Tesla announced Sunday it was upgrading its Autopilot software to use more advanced radar technology. In a...