Posted on 05/31/2016 2:21:33 PM PDT by AnthonySoprano
Upon review, you are correct, what I was responding to, was your statement: “This is impossible, since the public are humans. An enclosure has not yet been invented (and I wager it never will be invented) that a determined human wont be able to find a way to enter. Solving such problems is what humans do.”
Hence my comment about city, state, and federal requirements for licensing and funding requirements for secure enclosures for animals that interface with the general public. Also my response, that you call spam, from an Experienced Zoo Worker, specifically in the Gorilla Enclosures, showing the lengths she goes thru to protect herself, and the designs of the enclosures, when properly used, to protect her, and the danger these animals pose.
I agree that a determined individual will likely find a flaw in any design, just as a determined robber will find entry into a secured house, or a person committing suicide will crawl over a security fence on a bridge to kill themselves. Buy well over 99% of the population is not this determined. A 4 year old child stumbling into the enclosure, is a serious design flaw, and is solely the fault of the designer and the Zoo. It is solely a design failure, and needs correcting. The zoo staff did not monitor the enclosure enough to prevent the child getting inside. The mother was inattentive yes, but ultimately it was the Zoo’s error, and a design fault.
I did not answer a question, but addressed your comment.
Thanks for replying, and I hope I have addressed your concern.
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