1 Yes
2 When I actually went, around 30, but I saw them through TV since a child, maybe 6, maybe 8, maybe 10. TV was on and anybody could see it.
3 A torture. A slaughter. An ignominious savage tradition preserved up to date. Not very different from battering donkeys or hanging on a goose thats hold on a rope or thowing a goat from a bell tower, whic are considered savage by most but still happen in Spai.
4 In Madrid, Sevilla and a few others they are common. In the rest, only a week a year in local feasts.
5 I believe they are, there used to be bullfighting on horse and other specialities now disapeared.
6 No, it's so obvious... where's the art? moving the red cloth?
7 Some foreigners became very fond of it. I think there's hardly anything that's impossible for people.
8 Extremely strange. Maybe one time in ten thousands.
9 Many times there have been talks on that, and of course it could be done, but there is still too many uncultured people who can vote, and of course there are lobbies, since it's a business that moves lots of money.
10 Very scarce, scattered.
11 No, it would be a result of a change (very positive) in spanish culture.
12 Films are films, even kids can tell that Arnold Swarzenegger didn't die in the film, cause they know they saw it in the next. Bullfighting is REAL, real brutality that our kids are being fed with. How about seeing your children cut down in pieces a salamander?
Of course, bulls cannot be pardonned because they'd somehow 'teach' the others in contact, and it would be much more dangerous for bullfighters. They are not stupid and can communnicate, that's how species avoid extinction.