02 June 2016

Gorilla aftermatn

The Washington Post has more by Katie Mettler on the gorilla story:
“Parent shaming, or witch hunt on social media?” wondered the Cincinnati Enquirer. “Social media turns ugly after zoo episode.” That about summed it up Monday.
Three days after her four-year-old son plummeted fifteen feet into the Cincinnati Zoo gorilla exhibit, after animal rights activists blamed her with alleged poor parenting and for the death of a beloved, endangered ape named Harambe, then called on child protective services to investigate her, the boy’s mother became the Internet’s most reviled mom.
Authorities have not yet released the name of the child who tumbled into the Gorilla World exhibit Saturday afternoon, nor have they identified his parents. But the Internet doesn’t care about these sorts of formalities.
A mob of online parenting critics mobilized over the holiday weekend, lambasting a nameless figure they were convinced had neglected her child inside the zoo and was to blame for the events that transpired. Then a woman claiming to be the preschooler’s mother took to Facebook in a desperate attempt to defend herself.
God protected my child until the authorities were able to get to him. My son is safe and was able to walk away with a concussion and a few scrapes; no broken bones or internal injuries,” the woman wrote on Facebook, according to People magazine. “As a society we are quick to judge how a parent could take their eyes off of their child, and if anyone knows me, I keep a tight watch on my kids.” She added: “Accidents happen…”
While some news outlets named the woman, others, including The Washington Post, unable to verify that she was the mother in question, have not.
People wasted little time responding to the woman’s Facebook post with hateful comments, forcing her to eventually remove it altogether, People magazine reported. They then found the Facebook page for a preschool where a woman by the same name works, records show. They blasted that next, according to news reports, forcing the school to delete its page, too.
Other women who share her name on social media received threatening messages intended for her, attacks that called her “scum,” “a really bad mother” and a “fucking killer.”
“that animal is more important than your shitty kid,” one man messaged.
Another woman wrote: “You should’ve been shot.”
At times, the barrage of insults were racially charged, reported the Cincinnati Enquirer.
By Monday, the threats grew so intense that Cincinnati police felt compelled to act.
“Even though they’re not direct death threats, we’re going to reach out to the mother and let her know what’s going on, if she doesn’t know already,” police spokesman Lieutenant Steve Saunders told the Enquirer. “We’re going to keep her in the loop. We’re going to err on the side of safety for her and her family.”
The mother found some sympathetic advocates, including the zoo director and several witnesses who said the woman was keeping a watchful eye on her children at the exhibit and, when she realized her son had fallen in with the seventeen-year-old, four hundred-pound silverback gorilla, tried to jump in after him.
A witness named Deidre Lykins described what she saw and heard in a long post on Facebook, which has been shared over forty thousand times:
I was taking a pic of the female gorilla, when my eldest son yelled: “What is he doing? ” I looked down, and to my surprise, there was a small child that had apparently“flopped” over the railing, where there was then about three feet of ground that the child quickly crawled through! I assumed the woman next to me was the mother, getting ready to grab him until she says, “Whose kid is this? ” None of us actually thought he’d go over the nearly fifteen foot drop, but he was crawling so fast through the bushes, before myself or husband could grab him, he went over! The crowed got a little frantic and the mother was calling for her son. Actually, just prior to him going over, but she couldn’t see him crawling through the bushes! She said “He was right here! I took a pic and his hand was in my back pocket and then gone!” As she could find him nowhere, she looked to my husband (already over the railing talking to the child) and asks, “Sir, is he wearing green shorts? ” My husband reluctantly had to tell her yes, when she then nearly had a break down. They are both wanting to go over into the fifteen-foot drop, when I forbade my husband to do, and attempted to calm the mother by calling 911 and assure her help was on the way.
The incident began Saturday afternoon, when the boy crawled through a barrier, past some bushes, and over the edge of a moat in the gorilla enclosure. In the moments before he fell, a witness heard the boy tell his mother he wanted to jump in with the gorillas, reported NBC affiliate WLWT-TV.
Video footage shot by horrified visitors shows Harambe straddling the boy in the far left corner of the enclosure. At first, he appears to be standing guard, like he is protecting the boy, but he becomes agitated by visitors’ chaotic response to the fall and suddenly snatches the boy’s leg, violently dragging him through the foot of water that covers the floor of the enclosure. The dragging pauses momentarily, and the boy seems to try and scoot away from the gorilla, but as quickly as he did before, Harambe latches onto the child’s foot again and drags him to the opposite end of the enclosure.
Minutes later, visitors heard the crack of a gunshot.
On Sunday, the zoo wrote a lengthy statement on Facebook explaining why they chose to shoot the seventeen-year-old gorilla, rather than tranquilize him. They said the child’s life was in danger, and when the zookeepers called for the gorillas to exit the enclosure, Harambe did not obey like the two other females did. Tranquilizing the ape, they wrote, would have put the child at greater risk because it takes minutes for the drug to take effect and the dart could have agitated him further.
Zoo Director Thane Maynard further defended the zoo’s decision to fatally shoot the gorilla, whose nickname was “handsome Harambe.”
At a news conference, after protests from animal rights activists, Cincinnati Zoo director Thayne Maynard defended the decision to shoot the gorilla after a boy fell into his enclosure and was "being dragged around by the ankle and being hurt". "Looking back, we would make the same decision," Maynard said. “We’re talking about an animal that I’ve seen crush a coconut with one hand,” he said, noting that the stress of the situation had made the gorilla’s behavior even more erratic. “The child was being dragged around, his head was banging on concrete. This was not a gentle thing.”
The director also addressed suggestions that the zoo was to blame for the fall, since the barriers didn’t successfully keep the child out. Maynard told reporters the facility is inspected by the Department of Agriculture and the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and that the enclosure barriers exceed recommendations, Fox News 8 in Cleveland reported. “You can lock your car, you can lock your house, but if someone really wants to, they can get in,” Maynard said at the news conference. “Do you know any four-year-olds? They can climb over anything.”
But, despite Maynard’s words and law enforcement’s decision not to press any charges against the woman, critics continued to assault her parenting. During interviews in which they defended the zoo’s lethal response to the situation, two well-known wildlife experts and television personalities, Jack Hanna and Jeff Corwin, attacked her parenting.
“Zoos are not your babysitter,” Corwin told Fox 25 News. “Take a break from the cellphone and the selfie stick and the texting. Connect with your children. Be responsible for your children. I don’t think this happened in seconds or minutes. I think this took time, for this kid, for this little boy to find himself in this situation. And, ultimately, it’s the gorilla that paid that price.” Corwin emphasized that the loss of Harambe is especially devastating because his species is on the “precipice of extinction. No amount of money or biology or science can ever bring back what was lost with the death of this gorilla,” he said.
Rico says the mom will have to live with her stupidity for the rest of her life but, fortunately, the kid will forget...

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