Human Activity Displayed in Zoo

Anthony Bialy
4 min readApr 18, 2024

Zoos are great for studying animal behavior. The beings who live there watch the show. A scheme overcharging some to make entrance free for others means it’s not those behind fences getting scrutinized. Recognize behavioral patterns such as never recognizing behavioral patterns. Those allegedly on exhibit look outward and wonder what those gawky upright creatures are thinking.

Neither workers nor furry friends are being treated like good neighbors. The Buffalo Zoo provides an inadvertent look at failing to grasp outcomes. Their program creating complimentary admission sounds nice until realizing the price hike is paid for by those who, well, pay for tickets. A benefits card also doubles as a zoo pass if you fretted the definition hadn’t been stretched enough.

Why spend on anything? Free is much cheaper. There can’t possibly be a catch. That little bit about how anything is funded is an avaricious conspiracy promoted by heartless capitalists who insist upon payment for provided goods. Have the compassionate courage to think something can be made to cost as much as shoplifting. It just takes enough faith to defy sense.

I hate to bust up the fun of seeing giraffes’ antics gratis, but a wealth transfer isn’t going to ease the process. Charging more for admittance means more money unless fewer prospective visitors hit the turnstiles. Thinking incentives exist is a bunch of free-market mumbo jumbo. At least, it better be.

A ripoff spurs smirking amongst accomplices. Spot them on campaign signs. The newest type of entitlement means it’s time for a particularly smug style of self-righteousness from sanctimonious politicians who are for some reason involved in decisions regarding an animal enclosure. If it’s run as poorly as government, the zoo’s dwellers are in trouble.

People who think you’re not generous enough are preening about how indigent children will finally be able to see a zebra in person. In prototypical governmental fashion, those with collective urges make it more difficult for whippersnappers with parents who pay bills.

Getting punished for paying sums up human conduct. Scientists observing patterns shake their heads at endless tiresome patterns. Making just enough over the poverty line means punishment, so don’t knock yourself out working for some promotion.

Can you afford to see other species? Entering the Buffalo Zoo will run an adult who makes too much money 30 dollars. It’ll be over a hundred bucks for a family of four, which is a steep price even in the Bidenomics era. Hungry otters shouldn’t have to deal with shrinkflation.

It took me a whole seven seconds, but I came up with a way to help children see animals other than squirrels. Start with a lower ticket price. Offer patrons the chance to donate to an admission stockpile for the less fortunate. There: voluntary help keeps the beast park accessible instead of ironically putting attendance out of reach.

Animals are on the dole. It’s not their fault. Like just about every other area institution, the zoo is already subsidized by taxpayers. The refusal to distinguish between what’s worthwhile and whether involuntary contributions should be used for support is liberalism’s core.

If you really enjoy a cultural institution, feel free to give freely. You certainly wouldn’t make an enriching shed’s future precarious by draining the economy so messianic dolts who won elections can decide who’s worthy of bestowment.

A zoo simply couldn’t start a GoFundMe for expenses: the monkeys would spend gifts on toy cars and chicken fingers. Forget cutting out the middle monkey. The only option is apparently to drive up costs for suckers who work hard enough to not qualify for handouts.

Guilt is the government’s main currency. A one for the price of two deal may seem like a bit of a ripoff. But that’s only because you don’t care about ramen consumers. The problem is that everyone’s eating college snacks for dinner.

Democrats love the underprivileged so much that they they create more of them. Givers away of money belonging to others can’t figure out why things like a zoo trip are unaffordable. It must be corporate greed.

Eggs are a luxury. Forget seeing animals frolic regardless of whether or not they hatch. Prices have run amok like a stampeding buffalo herd because of the same sort of mentality that concludes you can create a benefit through compulsion. Every single maneuver to make things inexpensive cheapens results. Oh, and they make things expensive.

Democrats are so compassionate that they have to force donations. The pushy part refuses to comprehend assisting voluntarily. They’re capable of conceiving of helping others unlike those residing in the penned exhibits, which means there’s no excuse. Conditioning to believe daft things is not in one’s nature.

Beings who live more than 10 miles from a Starbucks learn about cause and effect in a harsh way. Menagerie proprietors are about to discover a similar lesson. Consequences are more dire in the wild. But earners are getting eaten alive.

The entry redistribution scheme will work great as long as ticket-buyers keep doing so. Can the mayor issue an executive order? The county needs a law compelling wildlife enthusiasts to keep purchasing, which only sounds silly until you realize that wouldn’t be that much different from coercing taxpayers.

Everything works out except for seeing animals. Zoo goons just made the place unaffordable for paying customers so they can preen about how much they care. And attendance is about to plummet, which means the program will be nowhere near financed. A philosophical and practical disaster sums up the beliefs of humans who don’t understand their own intrinsic traits.

Animals aren’t just cuter, funnier, and cooler than most humans: when it comes to those overseeing their displays, they’re more sensible, too. Zoology allies who aren’t logical about zoos showed a lack of comprehension regarding their society. Those who have an excuse to not grasp abstract convepts will look at the empty spaces in front of their enclosures and wonder where their pals went. The difference between zoo residents and liberals is that the former learn.

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