I hope the fish were killed quickly and humanely, at least
My stance on animal on animal rights/welfare best summed up by this Quote from a tv show called Saving Hope,
(although I wouldn't be surprised if it was paraphrased from something else):
"There is a difference between pain and suffering. Pain is in the body. Suffering is in the mind and it feels infinite."
How I apply this to animal welfare (Just my opinion) is:
Pain intensity and severity is completely and totally irrelevant to brain size and instead is directly related to number and sensitivity of pain sensing nerves in the affected area,
(Much like a human would feel much more pain to a puncture on the eyelid than a proportionate sized one between the shoulder blades.)
However, an animals capacity to feel suffering from that pain or other negative stimuli/situations is directly related to an animal's cognitive IE thinking, ability. (basically the smarter the animal, the more suffering it experiences, although I think the animals that experience no suffering, would make a very short list, indeed).
While there is no way to truly determine the exact level of an animal's ability to think, and thus capacity to suffer, IMO, if any animal has enough thinking ability to learn associate certain stimuli, that have nothing to do with food, with a source of food (IE the outline of a much larger, and thus potentially predatory fishkeeper, or the vibrations of an aquarium lid opening, which should normally be a cause for at least a little caution if they felt similar vibrations it in their natural habitat) then those animals have at least a very small capacity for some kind of suffering, and therefore deserve at least some consideration for humane treatment.
In this case, the worst part about it is:
They make fiberglass replicas so realistic now that in many cases, the replica looks better than the real (dead) animal!
http/www.permatrophy.com/replicas.php
With this, along with the "magic of Photoshop", or even one of the many high-quality FREE Photo editors
https/www.gimp.org/
There is no longer any excuse whatsoever to harm real animals for "art".
Ahem, sorry got a bit carried away there.
Anyway, the bottom line is:
This "art" is simply done in order to cause controversy in the laziest possible way, and it's obvious the only "awareness" that this person wants to raise is cheap publicity while attempting to avoid breaking any actual laws.
In this way they are like like a spoiled child throwing a tantrum whenever they are not the center of attention, while at the same. time being careful to not go far enough to force their parents to finally take serious action.
Or, to put it another way,
Sometimes there is a fine line between "art" and "trolling"
Edit: Sorry, about the rant, but I'm just upset that these poor fish are being killed, just because somebody wants to be the center of attention.
My stance on animal on animal rights/welfare best summed up by this Quote from a tv show called Saving Hope,
(although I wouldn't be surprised if it was paraphrased from something else):
"There is a difference between pain and suffering. Pain is in the body. Suffering is in the mind and it feels infinite."
How I apply this to animal welfare (Just my opinion) is:
Pain intensity and severity is completely and totally irrelevant to brain size and instead is directly related to number and sensitivity of pain sensing nerves in the affected area,
(Much like a human would feel much more pain to a puncture on the eyelid than a proportionate sized one between the shoulder blades.)
However, an animals capacity to feel suffering from that pain or other negative stimuli/situations is directly related to an animal's cognitive IE thinking, ability. (basically the smarter the animal, the more suffering it experiences, although I think the animals that experience no suffering, would make a very short list, indeed).
While there is no way to truly determine the exact level of an animal's ability to think, and thus capacity to suffer, IMO, if any animal has enough thinking ability to learn associate certain stimuli, that have nothing to do with food, with a source of food (IE the outline of a much larger, and thus potentially predatory fishkeeper, or the vibrations of an aquarium lid opening, which should normally be a cause for at least a little caution if they felt similar vibrations it in their natural habitat) then those animals have at least a very small capacity for some kind of suffering, and therefore deserve at least some consideration for humane treatment.
In this case, the worst part about it is:
They make fiberglass replicas so realistic now that in many cases, the replica looks better than the real (dead) animal!
http/www.permatrophy.com/replicas.php
With this, along with the "magic of Photoshop", or even one of the many high-quality FREE Photo editors
https/www.gimp.org/
There is no longer any excuse whatsoever to harm real animals for "art".
Ahem, sorry got a bit carried away there.
Anyway, the bottom line is:
This "art" is simply done in order to cause controversy in the laziest possible way, and it's obvious the only "awareness" that this person wants to raise is cheap publicity while attempting to avoid breaking any actual laws.
In this way they are like like a spoiled child throwing a tantrum whenever they are not the center of attention, while at the same. time being careful to not go far enough to force their parents to finally take serious action.
Or, to put it another way,
Sometimes there is a fine line between "art" and "trolling"
Edit: Sorry, about the rant, but I'm just upset that these poor fish are being killed, just because somebody wants to be the center of attention.