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Kata Nagy
Kata Nagy
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Monday 23 February 2026 14:34:24 GMT
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𝐊𝐚𝐲𝐝𝐞𝐧❤︎︎ :
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Egy tudatosan felépített rendszer, amelyben a befektetett munka arányos eredményt hoz.
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Other Videos

I’m actually sick... This is one of the most disturbing and heartbreaking wildlife cruelty cases ever reported, an orangutan named Pony was rescued from a remote village in Borneo, Indonesia — after being forced to live in conditions that shocked the world. This story isn’t just about an animal being mistreated. It’s about the failure of an entire system to protect the vulnerable, and the extreme abuse that often goes unseen in isolated regions. Pony wasn’t living in the wild. She wasn’t in a sanctuary. She was being held captive, chained to a wall, shaved regularly, and treated as property by those who saw her not as a living creature, but as a commodity. What happened to Pony was not only deeply unnatural — it was a reflection of how some animals are exploited in ways that defy basic human empathy. According to reports, villagers had taken Pony when she was still a baby. She was separated from her mother — which in the wild, often means the mother was blanked during the capture. Once taken, she was raised not with care or rehabilitation, but to be used for profit in an illegal and underground network that involved extreme exploitation. By the time she was rescued, her body was covered in scars. Her eyes were vacant. And she no longer behaved like a wild orangutan. She had been trained to obey humans and had become completely dependent on them for survival — not because of kindness, but because of long-term trauma. It took a team of armed officers and wildlife rescuers over a year of negotiating with local villagers to safely remove her. Even then, they were met with resistance. Many in the area didn’t see what was being done to Pony as abuse. To them, she was simply part of a business. Pony’s rescue was led by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, which spent years helping her recover physically and emotionally. She had to be reintroduced to the most basic instincts: climbing, foraging, avoiding humans. Decades later, she still lives under protected care, surrounded by other rescued orangutans, and is one of the most famous survivors of animal exploitation in Southeast Asia. This case has sparked outrage worldwide, but also exposed how common these situations are. In parts of the world where poverty, tourism, and underground markets collide, wild animals are often the first to suffer. This video breaks down everything: who found Pony, what she went through, how she was saved, and where she is now. It’s a wake-up call not just about wildlife crime — but about the global systems that allow it to happen. Pony’s story is more than tragic — it’s a symbol of what happens when profit is prioritized over compassion. If you care about animal rights, true injustice, or the resilience of survivors, this is a case you need to know. #PonyTheOrangutan #WildlifeInjustice #RealCrimeStory #AnimalExploitation #UnthinkableButTrue #TrueCrimeNotJustHumans #SurvivorStorytime #angiesfiles #fyp
I’m actually sick... This is one of the most disturbing and heartbreaking wildlife cruelty cases ever reported, an orangutan named Pony was rescued from a remote village in Borneo, Indonesia — after being forced to live in conditions that shocked the world. This story isn’t just about an animal being mistreated. It’s about the failure of an entire system to protect the vulnerable, and the extreme abuse that often goes unseen in isolated regions. Pony wasn’t living in the wild. She wasn’t in a sanctuary. She was being held captive, chained to a wall, shaved regularly, and treated as property by those who saw her not as a living creature, but as a commodity. What happened to Pony was not only deeply unnatural — it was a reflection of how some animals are exploited in ways that defy basic human empathy. According to reports, villagers had taken Pony when she was still a baby. She was separated from her mother — which in the wild, often means the mother was blanked during the capture. Once taken, she was raised not with care or rehabilitation, but to be used for profit in an illegal and underground network that involved extreme exploitation. By the time she was rescued, her body was covered in scars. Her eyes were vacant. And she no longer behaved like a wild orangutan. She had been trained to obey humans and had become completely dependent on them for survival — not because of kindness, but because of long-term trauma. It took a team of armed officers and wildlife rescuers over a year of negotiating with local villagers to safely remove her. Even then, they were met with resistance. Many in the area didn’t see what was being done to Pony as abuse. To them, she was simply part of a business. Pony’s rescue was led by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, which spent years helping her recover physically and emotionally. She had to be reintroduced to the most basic instincts: climbing, foraging, avoiding humans. Decades later, she still lives under protected care, surrounded by other rescued orangutans, and is one of the most famous survivors of animal exploitation in Southeast Asia. This case has sparked outrage worldwide, but also exposed how common these situations are. In parts of the world where poverty, tourism, and underground markets collide, wild animals are often the first to suffer. This video breaks down everything: who found Pony, what she went through, how she was saved, and where she is now. It’s a wake-up call not just about wildlife crime — but about the global systems that allow it to happen. Pony’s story is more than tragic — it’s a symbol of what happens when profit is prioritized over compassion. If you care about animal rights, true injustice, or the resilience of survivors, this is a case you need to know. #PonyTheOrangutan #WildlifeInjustice #RealCrimeStory #AnimalExploitation #UnthinkableButTrue #TrueCrimeNotJustHumans #SurvivorStorytime #angiesfiles #fyp

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