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In reply to the discussion: Recently Spotted 103-Year-Old Orca Is Bad News For SeaWorld -- Here's Why [View all]MADem
(135,425 posts)They could double the size of the box, to give the whale more wiggle room. They could heavily pad one end of it with inflatable bladders to catch the whale in a soft 'pillow' in the event the system fails.
Of course they should just let the whales go, and stop the whole program. They're unlikely to do that anytime soon--that's the sad truth. So long as they keep them locked up, they should at least make their torture less onerous, and in the interim, while they're waiting to get the spirit and do the right thing, I think they should go talk to the Navy, specifically, the Naval architects who build submarines.
There's no way they could let the poor things go, now, anyway--not before they learn to swim in a straight line at speed....