should circus animals be banned? kim collins mrs. pugh english 12

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Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

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Page 1: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Should Circus Animals Be Banned?

Kim CollinsMrs. PughEnglish 12

Page 2: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Transport and Housingof Animals

• In the wild– native to lands other than North

America. – Where they live, they have

adapted to their own specific climate over millions of years.

– free to gather food however they choose, whether it be eating plants and leaves like the elephant, or pursuing it's hunting instincts, like the Tiger.

– Can walk around on the dirt, take baths in water, hide in the grass, climb or rub up against a tree.

Page 3: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12
Page 4: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Transport and Housing of Animals

• In the Circus– Spend approximately 50 weeks of

the year traveling around the country, where the climate is controlled by where they may be.

– from brutal heat to frigid cold. – fed predetermined diets at

specific times, which may consist of food pellets, dried grass that is far from fresh, and meat that may be rotting.

– Rarely get to touch anything but metal cages, trucks, and railroad cars.

– May never touch a tree.– Spend days at a time chained in

cramped train cars or trucks, eating and sleeping in their own excrement.

Page 5: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12
Page 6: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Training of Animals

• Training is often done behind in secret behind closed doors

• Training methods– Whips– bullhook (a wooden stick with a

sharp, pointed hook at the end) intended to cause pain and puncture the skin

– Electric Shock– Tight collars– Trainers drug some animals to

make them “manageable” and surgically remove the teeth and claws from others. 

– Sticks, axe handles, baseball bats, metal pipes (weapons are used to hit and beat restrained animals in order to break their spirits and show them "who’s boss.“)

Page 7: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12
Page 8: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Treatment of Domestic animals used

• Horses were punched in the face and severely whipped.

• Dogs were only fed when they performed properly and were skin and bones under their fur.

• Cats were forced to jump from high platforms onto small pillows.

• Trainers who appeared to be petting dogs during the show were really inflicting a painful pinch.

• Records of horses that were reduced to skeletal remains

Page 9: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Performances

• Perform unnatural tricks that are often damaging to their bodies.

• elephant responds to verbal commands from a trainer carrying a bullhook

• Things animals are forced to perform– Headstands– hind-leg stands– lying down– tub-sitting– Crawling– twirling

Page 10: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12
Page 11: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Health• Animals often display neurotic

behavior, such as swaying and head-bobbing, from boredom and severe stress.

• Suffer from painful foot and joint disease, a leading cause of premature death in captive elephants, from standing too long on hard surfaces and in their own waste.

Page 12: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Health• Elelephants in Circuses Frequently

contract or are exposed to a human strain of tuberculosis (TB).

• TB is known to thrive in the cramped, close quarters that they are forced to endure day in and day out.

• In several instances, elephants known to be suffering from TB have been used to give rides to the public.

• Still give rides to young children

Page 13: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Public Safety• Since 1990, 57 people have been killed • more than 120 seriously injured by captive

elephants.• more than 123 documented attacks on

humans by captive large cats in the United States, 13 of which resulted in fatal injuries.

• November 18, 2005: A volunteer clown for the Shriners was sentenced to four years in prison and eight years of extended supervision for using a computer to facilitate a sex crime with the intent of having sex with a 14-year-old girl. The president of the Owensboro Shrine Clowns defended the man's character.

• May 25, 2004: Thomas Allen Riccio, a circus clown who performs under the name “Spanky” with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, was arrested in Fayetteville, N.C., and charged with 10 counts of third-degree sexual exploitation of a minor. found 2,000 pictures on Riccio’s computer, of child pornography that included girls as young as five years old

Page 14: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Tyke an circus elephant gunned down.

Page 15: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12

Siegfried & Roy Tiger Attack• On October 3, 2006

Montecore, a 600-pound white tiger, acted on instinct, like a typical wild animal, and attacked his long-time handler, Roy Horn of Siegfried & Roy, in a horrific incident that played out in front of a live audience at The Mirage in Las Vegas.

Page 16: Should Circus Animals Be Banned? Kim Collins Mrs. Pugh English 12