Matador Victor Barrio killed by bull in Spain
Dog fighting, cock fighting - so many vestiges from dark barbarous times are remained in many so called civilized countries.
The essence of all these entertainments is the same - making dirty immoral money and savage cruelty towards innocent living creatures.
Indulging the vile instincts of the dirty black ass Spanish crowd, the flayers-matadors in gorgeous garments for a long time with impunity tormented defenseless animals.
And at last some kind of just retribution came - this good lad, bull Lorenzo, destroyed one of these abominable flayers, butcher Victor Barrio.
You are surely a good lad, bull Lorenzo!
The just retribution came
The flayer, loser Victor Barrio
From Wikipedia
Bullfighting is now banned in many countries; people taking part in such activity would be liable for terms of imprisonment for animal cruelty. "Bloodless" variations, though, are permitted and have attracted a following in California, Texas, and France. In southern France, however, the traditional form of the corrida still exists and it is protected by French law. However, in June 2015 The Paris Court of Appeals removed bullfighting/"le corrida" from France's cultural heritage list. While it is not very popular in Texas, bullfighting is legal (the only U.S. state to allow it), and both bloodless and pure forms of bullfighting occur at rodeos in small Texas towns.
In 1991, the Canary Islands became the first Spanish Autonomous Community to ban bullfighting, when they legislated to ban bullfights and other spectacles that involve cruelty to animals, with the exception of cockfighting, which is traditional in some towns in the Islands. In the rest of Spain, national laws against cruelty to animals have abolished most blood sports, but specifically exempt bullfighting.
Several cities around the world (especially in Catalonia) have symbolically declared themselves to be Anti-Bullfighting Cities, including Barcelona in 2006. This was symbolic, as the city did not have the power to stop it. However, on 1 January 2012, it became prohibited in Catalonia (including Barcelona, the capital of this region) after a ban passed in the Regional Government in July 2010 came into effect in 2012.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.