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Why do Colombia and Ecuador still allow bullfighting?

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You can say that bullfight is a tradition and an art (although brutal), but more than all of that a good business. In Ecuador we had a popular vote to decide if bullfight is allowed or not and the results will apply county by county. read more

In Ecuador we had a popular vote to decide if bullfight is allowed or not and the results will apply county by county. In Quito the popular vote decided that it will be no longer allowed. The result is that on the month of December in which we had the “Feria de Quito” with restaurants full of people, plenty of street sales, high occupancy rates in hotels and a strong economic push, now December is dead. read more

In any case, bullfighting is not prohibited because many people in Spain do not think like you and they do like it, and others who do not like it opt for the prudent measure of not going to corridas, but do not consider neccesary to prohibit everything that they don’t like or understand. read more

According to Luis Alfonso Garcia Carmona, the executive director of the Association for the Defense of Bullfighting (Asotauro) in Medellín, the quality of Colombian bulls and matadors has declined—and with them, Colombia’s stature among the seven or so countries in Europe and Latin America where Spanish-style bullfighting is still practiced. read more

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