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Outrage after Chinese theme park forces pig to bungee jump

beijingwalker

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Outrage after Chinese theme park forces pig to bungee jump
  • 9 hours ago
_110572266_thepaper.png


A Chinese theme park has triggered a wave of outrage on social media after it forced a pig to bungee jump off a 68-metre high tower.

Video footage shows the pig tied to a pole, carried by two men to the top of a tower before being pushed off.

The theme park located in Chongqing said the stunt was held to mark the opening of the new bungee attraction.

Local media outlets said the pig was sent to a slaughterhouse afterwards.

The stunt caused anger online - reflecting the growing importance of animal rights among China's population.

The theme park has since put out a statement, saying that it accepted the "criticism" it had received.

"We sincerely accept netizens' criticism and advice and apologise to the public," it said. "We will improve [our] marketing of the tourist site, to provide tourists with better services."

'Vulgar marketing tactic'
The incident took place on 18 January at the Meixin Red Wine Town theme park in the sprawling Chinese municipality of Chongqing in south-western China.

The publicity event - which organisers called the golden pig bungee jump - was held to celebrate the opening of the theme park's bungee attraction.

The pig, which according to local reports weighed 75kg (165 lbs), is seen being pushed off the tower with a purple cape tied around its shoulders. In one video of the incident, what sound like pig squeals can be heard.

What happens to the pig afterwards is not shown, though many local media reports say it was eventually sent to a slaughterhouse.

Animal cruelty is not punishable by law in China. However, there has been growing awareness of animal welfare issues in recent years.

Though a handful of people defended the incident on social media, saying it wasn't any different to "killing a pig for food", the majority of users condemned the company's actions.

"This is a super vulgar marketing tactic," said one commenter.

"Killing animals for consumption and treating them cruelly for entertainment are two different things," another said. "There is no need to torture them like this."

Animal protection organisation Peta condemned the incident, calling it "animal cruelty at its worst".

"Pigs experience pain and fear in the same ways that we do, and this disgusting PR stunt should be illegal," Jason Baker, Peta senior vice-president of international campaigns, told BBC News.

"The Chinese public's angry response should be a wake-up call to China's policy-makers to implement animal protection laws immediately."

 
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Outrage after Chinese theme park forces pig to bungee jump
  • 9 hours ago
_110572266_thepaper.png


A Chinese theme park has triggered a wave of outrage on social media after it forced a pig to bungee jump off a 68-metre high tower.

Video footage shows the pig tied to a pole, carried by two men to the top of a tower before being pushed off.

The theme park located in Chongqing said the stunt was held to mark the opening of the new bungee attraction.

Local media outlets said the pig was sent to a slaughterhouse afterwards.

The stunt caused anger online - reflecting the growing importance of animal rights among China's population.

The theme park has since put out a statement, saying that it accepted the "criticism" it had received.

"We sincerely accept netizens' criticism and advice and apologise to the public," it said. "We will improve [our] marketing of the tourist site, to provide tourists with better services."

'Vulgar marketing tactic'
The incident took place on 18 January at the Meixin Red Wine Town theme park in the sprawling Chinese municipality of Chongqing in south-western China.

The publicity event - which organisers called the golden pig bungee jump - was held to celebrate the opening of the theme park's bungee attraction.

The pig, which according to local reports weighed 75kg (165 lbs), is seen being pushed off the tower with a purple cape tied around its shoulders. In one video of the incident, what sound like pig squeals can be heard.

What happens to the pig afterwards is not shown, though many local media reports say it was eventually sent to a slaughterhouse.

Animal cruelty is not punishable by law in China. However, there has been growing awareness of animal welfare issues in recent years.

Though a handful of people defended the incident on social media, saying it wasn't any different to "killing a pig for food", the majority of users condemned the company's actions.

"This is a super vulgar marketing tactic," said one commenter.

"Killing animals for consumption and treating them cruelly for entertainment are two different things," another said. "There is no need to torture them like this."

Animal protection organisation Peta condemned the incident, calling it "animal cruelty at its worst".

"Pigs experience pain and fear in the same ways that we do, and this disgusting PR stunt should be illegal," Jason Baker, Peta senior vice-president of international campaigns, told BBC News.

"The Chinese public's angry response should be a wake-up call to China's policy-makers to implement animal protection laws immediately."


What year is this!?

Why is BeijingWalker posting anti-China posts!? Am I going crazy here? :o:
 
. . . . .
What about Human Right Laws & Freedom of Speech??

Are pigs more important than Humans?
China has more human rights than most countries, in forms of standard of living, healthcare, education, public service, safety and low crime rate... human rights don't only mean the right to argue and whine about staged politics with an empty stomach.
 
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What about Human Right Laws & Freedom of Speech??

Are pigs more important than Humans?

China needs improvement in those areas too but realistically there are limits to what is possible given that China's social conditions are vastly different from Western countries.
 
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They should not have killed the pig for food afterwards, if they treated the pig as the pig of the ending year. And treated the pig as a pet, there would be less outrage.

But what is the difference between a pig bungee jumping

and this:


"How dare you abuse animals, while I am going to scare the heck out of my dog skydiving together."
 
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Hiding in the US?? Says who?? You?? A false flagging CCP troll? :lol:

Get a life man. :D
haha so im a false falgger now for busting your arse?

assuming u're not false-flagging, your origeeeeeeeeeen~~ is pakistan, no? but u r staying in the US now, no?

i call that 'hiding'- u can call it whatever suits your palate.
 
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China has more human rights than most countries, in forms of standard of living, healthcare, education, public service, safety and low crime rate... human rights don't only mean the right to argue and whine about staged politics with an empty stomach.

Right....and I'm a Martian. :lol:

Straight from CCP handbook, am I right?

China needs improvement in those areas too but realistically there are limits to what is possible given that China's social conditions are vastly different from Western countries.

True.

haha so im a false falgger now for busting your arse?

assuming u're not false-flagging, your origeeeeeeeeeen~~ is pakistan, no? but u r staying in the US now, no?

i call that 'hiding'- u can call it whatever suits your palate.

Living somewhere else = hiding??

Did you take your meds today???

So the millions of Chinese (like you or your ancestors) that moved to Singapore, Malaysia & Indonesia are all now "hiding"?? :rofl:
 
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Right....and I'm a Martian. :lol:

Straight from CCP handbook, am I right?



True.



Living somewhere else = hiding??

Did you take your meds today???

So the millions of Chinese (like you or your ancestors) that moved to Singapore, Malaysia & Indonesia are all now "hiding"?? :rofl:
my origin is singapore, i was born in Singapore and i AM living in Singapore now. How is that hiding? I have only 1 flag- u have 2.


HAHA. hilarious
 
. .
So why do you care so much about China?? :rolleyes:

Only a false flagger would go into every Chinese thread on PDF and argue with others and start defending China. :lol:
i dont, i only enjoy busting bullshits- and i happen to dwell in the far east section for most of my time here. it's reflected in my posting trend.


and most of my posts r always backed up by sources, pictures n articles.
 
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Outrage after Chinese theme park forces pig to bungee jump
  • 9 hours ago
_110572266_thepaper.png


A Chinese theme park has triggered a wave of outrage on social media after it forced a pig to bungee jump off a 68-metre high tower.

Video footage shows the pig tied to a pole, carried by two men to the top of a tower before being pushed off.

The theme park located in Chongqing said the stunt was held to mark the opening of the new bungee attraction.

Local media outlets said the pig was sent to a slaughterhouse afterwards.

The stunt caused anger online - reflecting the growing importance of animal rights among China's population.

The theme park has since put out a statement, saying that it accepted the "criticism" it had received.

"We sincerely accept netizens' criticism and advice and apologise to the public," it said. "We will improve [our] marketing of the tourist site, to provide tourists with better services."

'Vulgar marketing tactic'
The incident took place on 18 January at the Meixin Red Wine Town theme park in the sprawling Chinese municipality of Chongqing in south-western China.

The publicity event - which organisers called the golden pig bungee jump - was held to celebrate the opening of the theme park's bungee attraction.

The pig, which according to local reports weighed 75kg (165 lbs), is seen being pushed off the tower with a purple cape tied around its shoulders. In one video of the incident, what sound like pig squeals can be heard.

What happens to the pig afterwards is not shown, though many local media reports say it was eventually sent to a slaughterhouse.

Animal cruelty is not punishable by law in China. However, there has been growing awareness of animal welfare issues in recent years.

Though a handful of people defended the incident on social media, saying it wasn't any different to "killing a pig for food", the majority of users condemned the company's actions.

"This is a super vulgar marketing tactic," said one commenter.

"Killing animals for consumption and treating them cruelly for entertainment are two different things," another said. "There is no need to torture them like this."

Animal protection organisation Peta condemned the incident, calling it "animal cruelty at its worst".

"Pigs experience pain and fear in the same ways that we do, and this disgusting PR stunt should be illegal," Jason Baker, Peta senior vice-president of international campaigns, told BBC News.

"The Chinese public's angry response should be a wake-up call to China's policy-makers to implement animal protection laws immediately."


Once again this is due to heredity.

These behaviours only shows that for too long these people have been left without any moral guidance, that is at least from the 13th century when they lost their independence as a civilization, ruled by an unbroken chain of foreign barbaric Mongolian then Manchurian then European colonial invaders.

Go to Siam and see how street dogs are treated. Buddha's compassion has left these colonial offsprings.

Not long ago, during the civil war in the 1930s, before the CCP's victory, it is known that peasants used to ate 馒头 soaked in the blood of beheaded prisoners after public executions, deemed nutritious. It doesn't only happens in Syria.

What is worse?

Vietnam Festival: Live Pig Chopped In Half To Honor Village Deity (WARNING: GRAPHIC)

02/02/2012 12:03 pm ET

Each year, on the sixth day of the lunar new year, the villagers of a town about 25 miles north of Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi, organize a festival to honor their local guardian deity, Doan Thuong. The celebrations include traditional festival features such as a march and live music, but one part of the ceremony is not for the faint of heart.

According to Reuters, a live pig is shuttled around the village before being placed on the ground on its back. Assistants hold ropes attached to the pig’s legs, spreading the animal’s appendages apart to expose its belly. A man wielding a large blade then chops the pig in half, and the villagers rush to smear the blood on bank notes, hoping for good luck in the new year.

The practice has been condemned by activists inside Vietnam and abroad.

For more photos of the festival, check out ChinaSMACK.

WARNING: The video below contains GRAPHIC footage.

In the video below posted by AsianTown.net, watch footage of the pig being chopped in half:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/vietnam-live-pig-chopped-in-half_n_1246685


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ae4ffdaeb02c2ea160fb33e41686a846f36755ca.gif

:cool::smokin:8-)
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