Paro, Japan's cute & cuddly seal pup therapy robot, has begun soothing and comforting elderly residents of a senior care center in Montreal, Quebec. Naturally, Canadian seal hunters have a problem with this.
Bolduc discussed the robots with reporters covering his visit and defended their purchase stating “It's very serious, these people have trouble with their cognitive abilities and the seal helps them feel very pleasant emotions.”
Emotions of a quite different kind are being expressed by seal hunters, however, who feel the white-coated robot seals have no place in government-run care centers. “It's been half a century that we are treated like assassins or barbarians,” stated Leonce Arseneau, “and our minister, he thinks (the robotic seals) are cute.”
“With all these myths about the hunt that we have to try and dispel, we don't understand why the government didn't choose a baby dog, or a baby cat or a baby rabbit for senior care centres,” fulminated Arseneau. “We haven't even been able to kill baby seals since 1987.”
This is technically true: Canadian law allows hunters to take young seals once they begin to molt their downy white newborn coats. As this occurs when the pups are 12 to 15 days old, they are often considered to be “babies” depending upon one's POV of the seal hunt itself.
Meanwhile, Quebec's government was frantically exercising spin control in an effort to defuse the brewing tempest in a teacup. According to Natacha Joncas-Boudreau, Bolduc's spokesperson, the minister “did not encourage the buying of the seals, he just highlighted a local initiative.”
Joncas-Boudreau also stated the Minister of Health “recognizes that Quebec's seal hunt is a sustainable activity that does not involve cruelty.” Even Jean Charest, Quebec's Premier, was drawn into the fracas and was forced to defend his minister, denying claims his government showed support for a stuffed animal over its citizens and reiterating that Bolduc “only described what he saw.” (via Canoe, Spiegel Online, and Eueublog)