no they do not
No. They only live in Antarctica. No penguins of any kind live anywhere in the Arctic.
No, they are not naturally occurring there. Penguins only live SOUTH of the Equator.
sometimes yes or no for now...
Yes, they are distant cousins.
No. There are no penguins in the Arctic; nor there are polar bears in the Antarctic. Penguins are restricted almost entirely to the Southern Hemisphere (except for a few colonies on the Galápagos Islands).
Describing someone as a "distant cousin" is a very imprecise way of saying that they are related to you, but the speaker either does not know exactly how or they are not a first cousin, but are "more distant."
You have to be in a room with Aunt arctic, Cadence, Rockhopper or any other famous penguins
a polar bear can! polar bears eat seals, PENGUINS , and any other meat they can find in the Arctic!
Because no one goes to the arctic to hunt penguins and it is material for them to be in that climate so they are not in any harm to make them endangered.
yes there is although there aren't any in the arctic !
Polar bears occur in the Arctic or northern hemisphere while all 17 species of penguins evolved in the southern hemisphere. Also penguin flesh is not particularly nutritious to a polar bear, which generally relies on pinniped or cetacean blubber to survive.
Polar bears live on the ice. To survive they pretty much have to eat any animal they can find and kill. They don't eat Penguins because polar bears live in the Arctic and Penguins in the antarctic, the opposite end of the Earth. But since polar bears don't travel that far, they can only eat animals native to the Arctic. And there are plenty of other animals apart from Penguins who never make it that far North.