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‘Sick joker’ feeds bee with drug Ecstasy and films it ‘dancing’

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‘Sick joker’ feeds bee with drug Ecstasy and films it ‘dancing’
News

News

‘Sick joker’ feeds bee with drug Ecstasy and films it ‘dancing’

2018-07-20 18:26 Last Updated At:18:26

Can you imagine that someone gives a bee some E?

Everyone knows bees benefit mankind. Even Albert Einstein said that if bees disappear from the earth, we human being can not live for more than four years.

However, a man who wants to amuses himself chose to abuse a bee by feeding it with drugs Ecstasy. He filmed a video to recording it struggling and said it seemed to be dancing.

He uploaded the video on Facebook last Tuesday and it has raised at loud impact. The man was criticized by lots of people for his brutality, and the video was quickly deleted.

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Online photo

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online photo

In the video, the man uses a teaspoon to contain some brown liquid that he claimed it liquefied Ecstasy to feed the bee. Afterward, the bee can be seen becoming weird and trying to move without much strength.

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online photo

The merciless man later plays dance music again. When he sees the bee constantly struggling, he shouts excitedly, "Look at it. It is dancing!"

The man not only uploaded a short film, but also multiple photos, including the picture of a pile of white powder next to the bee.

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online photo

Social media users expressed their anger and pointed out that the man was outrageous, and the bee was likely to die. Some even said that it was too disappointing that the bee didn’t sting him.

MADRID (AP) — Spain on Tuesday approved a plan aimed at making reparation and economic compensation for victims of sex abuse committed by people connected to the Catholic Church.

It also announced the future celebration of a public act of recognition for those affected and their families.

The Minister of the Presidency and Justice, Félix Bolaños, said the plan was based on recommendations in a report by Spain's Ombudsman last year. From that report, he said it was concluded that some 440,000 adults may have suffered sex abuse in Spain by people linked to the church and that roughly half of those cases were committed by clergy.

Bolaños said the compensation would be financed by the church.

But in a statement Tuesday, Spain’s Bishops Conference rejected the plan, saying it discriminated against victims outside of church circles.

No details of how much or when financial compensation would be paid were released. Neither was a date set for any public act of recognition.

Bolaños said the plan aimed to “settle a debt with those victims who for decades were forgotten by everyone and now our democracy aims to repair” that, and make it a central part of government policy.

After years of virtually ignoring the issue, Spain’s bishops apologized for the abuses committed by church members following the Ombudsman's report but disputed the number of victims involving the church as exaggerated. That report accused the church of widespread negligence.

Bolaños said the government hoped to carry out the plan over the next four years in collaboration with the church.

The project will include free legal assistance for all victims of sexual abuse and it will reinforce the prevention supervision in schools.

Only a handful of countries have had government-initiated or parliamentary inquiries into clergy sex abuse, although some independent groups have carried out their own investigations.

FILE - A woman prays at the San Ramon Nonato church after an Easter Holy Week procession was cancelled due to the coronavirus outbreak in Madrid, Spain, Thursday, April 9, 2020. Spain has approved a plan aimed at making reparation and economic compensation for victims of sex abuses committed by people connected to the Catholic Church. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)

FILE - A woman prays at the San Ramon Nonato church after an Easter Holy Week procession was cancelled due to the coronavirus outbreak in Madrid, Spain, Thursday, April 9, 2020. Spain has approved a plan aimed at making reparation and economic compensation for victims of sex abuses committed by people connected to the Catholic Church. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez, File)

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