I think that Wolf's point was that lying to kids about animals is not what you would call the best education. Lying about Santa, the Tooth Fairy or the Easter Bunny is just a way of preserving childhood. It's a lie but it's a lie that is never going to hurt the kid perception of nature or anything else. Personally, I think that teaching kids about animals and different species is the best thing one can do for them.
Yes, Michael, I am aware that you allow kids in the park to touch your birds but not everybody agrees with this practice. Personally, I don't allow any stranger to touch any of my parrots. I have one cockatoo that is a show-off and a ham and loves people but even he can get testy at times and go after your feet with his huge beak. I think it's stressful and unnatural to allow strangers physical access to parrots because, in the wild, they would not allow a strange parrot (and much less a member of a different species) to touch them. But a few kids in the park (not their home) surrounded by grown-ups and cameras (ergo, on their best behavior) is not the same as an audience of 25 kids that are at high levels of excitement (we don't even allow our own dogs to mingle with the kids during my grand-kids birthday parties!).









