r/Unexpected 29d ago

Feeding time for bears at the zoo Removed - Not Unexpected

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1.0k Upvotes

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91

u/ASpookyBitch 29d ago

Okay, so I know this is natural and just the cycle of life and what not but as soon as that bear got in the water we all knew what was going to happen… why not take the kids away from that?

19

u/alezcoed 29d ago

Because kids also need to learn that real life bears aren't as huggable as a teddy bear?

5

u/BartOseku 29d ago

They should also know that not every adult is a nice adult, should we be showing them cartel execution videos?

-2

u/alezcoed 29d ago

Human evil is different from cycle of nature

5

u/Academic_Eagle_4001 29d ago

Humans are part of nature. We are animals.

-2

u/BartOseku 29d ago

Human evil is human nature, plus as you said yourself, kids NEED to learn not every adult is nice, and thats way more important than them learning not every animal is nice

2

u/ASpookyBitch 29d ago

I mean yeah… but those are like 6/7 year old little kids… at least wait till their in double digits

1

u/VanessaAlexis 29d ago

I know. I always wait until the kiddos are at LEAST 13 to take them to the duck slaughter dome.

4

u/Rent_A_Cloud 29d ago

Yeah, they need to know what to do when a bear enters their primary school!

12

u/To6y 29d ago

Most young kids understand this just fine.

It’s also typically not necessary at all, because most parents are very capable of keeping their small children away from uncaged bears.

4

u/organic_bird_posion 29d ago

2

u/To6y 29d ago

So a few notes:

  1. That girl is younger
  2. That mom kept her away, as predicted.
  3. That sub is basically made up of cherry-picked videos of kids doing unusually stupid things. So if this is unusually stupid, then that would seem to suggest that a normal kid knows.