What makes a beach a "protected" beach? In the last clip Natal Sharks Board explained that the nets are not barriers, in fact most animals are caught after already visiting the beach then attempting to go back to the open ocean. This means that humans and sharks were sharing that water without incident up until the time the sharks left and were killed trying to return to sea. I'd like you to mull that over for a minute and then answer at least one of the following: 1. If the sharks were at the beach with you, in your opinion, does this qualify as what you imagined a "protected" beach to be? 2. Why didn't those sharks bite anyone? Did the presence of nets that sharks didn't encounter have anything to do with whether or not they bit anyone? 3. If no, then what's the difference between a protected beach and a non protected beach other than the random killing of animals? Please help us bring this story to the public. https://igg.me/at/7LwmPotb0HA #nosharkcull #monsters #greatwhitelies #skylerthomas #sharkculling #sharkangels #durban #natalsharksboard #killingsharks #whitesharkvideo #wsv Footage by Skyler Thomas of @whitesharkvideo music by #solidgreysky














