“Large glass windows had been installed in the exhibit, and the orangutans took to pitching rocks at them. San Diego officials, thinking quickly, instituted an exchange program. One non-thrown stone would get you a banana. But the orangutans were not interested and kept trying to break the windows. The park finally had to bring in a contractor to dig up the entire ground floor of the exhibit in order to remove all of the rocks, as each shattered window cost the zoo $900 to replace. What happened next? The orangutans began to tear the ceramic insulators off of the wall and threw them instead. Evidently, these animals really wanted out.” FunnyFreedomResistanceAnimalsSanctuaryCaptivityZooOrangutan Book:Fear of the Animal Planet: The Hidden History of Animal Resistance Source: Fear of the Animal Planet: The Hidden History of Animal Resistance
“Organization and mutual aid are essential aspects in many animal cultures, including elephants, gorillas, and chimpanzees. Zoos, however, are places wherein that culture is restricted, altered, or even destroyed. This is done, whether intentionally or not, through the removal of autonomy, the break up of the family unit, restrictions on corporeal movement, continuous transfer of animals from one facility to next, and in the alteration of other living patterns. Psychologists call this a process of alienation and institutionalization. Hence, within these species, what we tend to see in zoos is a much more individualistic-based community.” CultureIntelligenceCooperationAnimalsZoosZooOrangutans Book:Fear of the Animal Planet: The Hidden History of Animal Resistance Source: Fear of the Animal Planet: The Hidden History of Animal Resistance