Premium Only Content

PRN.Live Presents: A Just Cause 11-25-22 #shorts #shortvideo #shortsviral
From rhinos destroying crops in Nepal, to wolves and bears wandering through
langering livestock on ranches and alarming people in Europe and the
US, the conflict between humans and wildlife is a problem which continues to persist as home spaces for each overlap. Is there a way for people and wildlife to coexist more peacefully?
On today's PEACE TALKS RADIO episode, correspondent
Priyanka Shankar take us on a safari to India and to the US
exploring the main reasons behind human-wildlife conflicts
Focusing on how people can learn to coexist with animals, in
this episode we will first talk to Gerard Martin, a
conservationist based in South India. He focuses on trying to
educate people, especially young children, on how to coexist
with snakes. Death due to snake bites is a very big problem in
hich naturally reflects badly on the animal. But GerardMartin is trying to change that.
We will then travel back to the United States and visit the forests and valleys of the Sierra Nevada and talk to Petros Chrysafis. He has also established predator monitoring tools and non-lethal deterrent measures to ensure livestock and wildlife coexist safely.
Lastly, we will hear from Paula Pebsworth, a primatologist who has worked on mitigating
human-wildlife conflict between primates and humans in many parts of the world and is currently based in Texas. Paula's focus is to find solutions for humans and wild animals to coexist in harmony. She also addresses the more neutral language and narratives
policymakers, the media, researchers, conservationists, and others could be using to help educate people more accurately about human-wildlife conflict.
"For me, the end goal here isn't humans loving animals that they are in conflict with. I just want them to tolerate and understand the animals. Right? So you can, on your own
ree time, hate that animal as much as you want. But I want you to understand that, it
doesn't really do anything that it does in any sort of malevolent way. It just exists. And
its basic biological drives are to find food, to protect its young and to mate. Right. And
to exist as an animal. So tolerance is where I want to be."
~ Petros Chrysafis :, California Wildlife Conservationist
-
38:07
Michael Franzese
5 hours agoLeaving Organized Crime and Uncovering Mob in Politics: Tudor Dixon and Michael Franzese
32.5K10 -
2:42:54
Jewels Jones Live ®
1 day agoAMERICA IS BACK | A Political Rendezvous - Ep. 111
30.4K37 -
LIVE
Due Dissidence
1 day agoLIVE: Workers Strike Back Conference ft. Chris Hedges, Jill Stein, Kshama Sawant, and More!
1,112 watching -
8:36:37
Right Side Broadcasting Network
5 days agoLIVE REPLAY: CPAC 2025 Day Three with President Donald J. Trump - 2/22/25
368K89 -
1:05:34
The Big Mig™
13 hours agoConfirmed Kash Patel New FBI Director, Bring On The Pain |EP483
61.2K21 -
53:59
Tactical Advisor
9 hours agoThe Vault Room Podcast 009 | Everyone Getting $5000?!
55.6K11 -
2:04:44
TheAlecLaceShow
20 hours agoLive at CPAC | Interviews with Dean Cain, Rep. Comer and more! | The Alec Lace Show
66.6K3 -
LIVE
Major League Fishing
3 days agoLIVE Tackle Warehouse Invitationals, Stop 1, Day 2
430 watching -
3:12:37
I_Came_With_Fire_Podcast
17 hours agoNOC Spy: CIA uses SATANIC RITUAL ABUSE to make SLEEPER Cells
78.3K17 -
28:42
CatfishedOnline
1 day ago $3.35 earnedWoman Insists Morgan Wallen Relationship Isn't a Romance Scam!
58.7K2