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Archive for June, 2009

BY: Mama Kimberly ♥’s animals!

Animal Rights

Thousands of Chickens Burn Alive; CCF is Amused
by Stephanie Ernst
Published June 03, 2009

The Center for Consumer Freedom and its unscrupulous mouth piece are fond of pretending that they do care about at least basic animal welfare but that they’re just “normal” about it, as opposed to those of us who are extreme– that is, those of us who really care about eliminating unnecessary suffering rather than just occasionally pretending to care for sake of PR. Well, here’s one of those great examples of how much they care:

What’s he referring to? What’s so funny that it calls for his trademark flippancy and sarcasm? Thousands of chickens were burned alive in Washington State late last night and early this morning. Clearly hilarious.

Fellow animals able to feel terror and pain every bit as much as you and I were trapped inside enormous sheds, while smoke joined the usual burning ammonia in their lungs, while they panicked, while they screamed out and flapped their wings as much as their cramped quarters and burdened bodies would allow, while they burned alive, trapped and with no hope of escape. And a propaganda artist who likes to set himself and his clients up as the level-headed ones, as the ones who represent the majority of Americans and consumers, thinks it’s funny. He’s just disappointed that they burned to a crisp inside a shed rather than on his grill. The panic, the horror, the terror, the pain — it’s all irrelevant.

Screw you, Martosko. Screw you

And while we’re talking about this nightmare, exactly how many chickens died? Oh, we don’t know yet, or at least it’s not printed in the news stories. I’ve located (this fire/rescue news site finds the story funny too apparently; “Chickens Fry in Washington Blaze,” it quips). We just know it was in the “thousands.” But we do know, of course, that the massive blaze caused $2.2 million in “damages.” Money, as always, is what’s important. Not unknown thousands of individual living beings, each one of whom had his or her own personality, each one of whom wanted to live, each one of whom suffered, in terror, as much in that fire as either you or I would have–and each one of whom undoubtedly suffered horribly up until those final terrible moments too.

Almost exactly a year ago, I wrote in a personal space about media reports on a fire in Boston in which countless lobsters died. There too, the real victims–the animals themselves– didn’t matter. We didn’t hear about how many lobsters died. We didn’t read about how awful their deaths must have been– after all, they were just lobsters, and people were going to boil them alive anyway, right? Instead, the lamentations were over how many pounds of “lobster” were “lost,” how much money went up in smoke.

I don’t have the words to conclude this post poetically or wittily. I’m just too sad. I’m just too disappointed. I’m just too angry and in awe of human callousness and carelessness and lack of compassion. We are not the superior species we claim to be.

SOURCE

Stop Animal Cruelty!

Heart Earth

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From: Duchess Von Teese
Date: 08 Jun 2009, 02:31

A Letter from a Shelter Manager:

As a shelter manager, I am going to share a little insight with you all …a view from the inside, if you will.

First off, all of you breeders/sellers should be made to work in the “back” of an animal shelter for just one day. ONE DAY!

Maybe if you saw the life drain from these sad, lost, & confused eyes, you would change your mind about breeding and selling to people you don’t even know. That puppy you just sold will most likely end up in my shelter when it’s not a cute little puppy anymore.

So how would you feel if you knew that there’s a 90% chance that dog will never walk out of the shelter where it’s going to be dumped? Purebred or not …about 50% of all of the dogs that are “owner surrenders” or “strays” are purebred dogs!

“We’re moving and can’t take our dog (or cat).” Really?!

“The dog got bigger than we thought it would.” How big did you think a German Shepherd would get?

They always tell me, “we just don’t want to have to stress about finding a place for her. We know she’ll get adopted, she’s a good dog.”

Odds are your pet won’t get adopted. How stressful do you think it is to be dumped at a shelter? Well, let me tell you, your pet has 72 hours to find a new family from the moment you drop it off. Sometimes a little longer if the shelter isn’t full and your dog manages to stay completely healthy. If it sniffles, it dies.

Your pet will be confined to a small run/kennel in a room with about 25 other barking or crying animals. It will have to relieve itself where it eats and sleeps. It will be depressed and it will cry constantly for the family that abandoned it.

If your pet is lucky, I will have enough volunteers in that day to take him/her for a walk. If I don’t, your pet won’t get any attention besides having a bowl of food slid under the kennel door and the waste sprayed out of it’s pen with a high-powered hose.

If your dog is big, black or any of the “Bully” breeds (Pit Bull, Rottie, Mastiff, etc) it was pretty much dead when you walked through the front door. Those dogs just don’t get adopted. It doesn’t matter how ‘sweet’ or ‘well behaved’ they are. If your dog doesn’t get adopted within it’s 72 hours and the shelter is full, it will be destroyed. If the shelter isn’t full and your dog is good enough, and of a desirable enough breed it may get a stay of execution, but not for long. Most dogs get very kennel protective after about a week and are destroyed for showing aggression. Even the sweetest dogs will turn in this environment.

Here’s a little Euthanasia 101 for those of you that have never witnessed a perfectly healthy, scared animal being “put-down.” First, your pet will be taken from its kennel on a leash. They always look like they think they are going for a walk …happy, wagging their tails …until they get to “The Room.” Every one of them freaks out and puts the brakes on when they get to the door. It must smell like death or they can feel the sad souls that are left in there. It’s strange, but it happens with every one of them. Your dog or cat will be restrained, held down by 1 or 2 vet techs, depending on their size and how freaked out they are. Then aeuthanasia tech or a vet will start the process. They will find a vein in the front leg and inject a lethal dose of the “pink stuff”. Hopefully your pet doesn’t panic from being restrained and jerk. I’ve seen needles tear out of a leg and been covered with the resulting blood & deafened by the yelps and screams. They all don’t just “go to sleep,” sometimes they spasm for a while, gasp for air and defecate on themselves. When it all ends, your pet’s corpse will be stacked like firewood in a large freezer in the back …with all of the other animals killed that day …waiting to be picked up like garbage.

Between 9 and 11 MILLION animals die every year in shelters and only you can stop it. I do my best to save every life I can but rescues are always full, and there are more animals coming in everyday than there are homes.

My point to all of this: DON’T BREED OR BUY WHILE SHELTER PETS DIE.

I hope someone will walk into my shelter and say “I saw this and it made me want to adopt.”


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Animal Cruelty

Jun-6-2009 By zahnyx

All animals feel pain!

….When people think of cruelty, they often think of a person starving or beating an animal. In other words, they think of actions that are against the law. They may also think of things done by other nations, such as whale hunting, bear farming, bull fighting, or clubbing seal pups.

….Certainly all of these actions are cruel,
but animals also suffer much closer to home.
Mostly people don’t think about everyday suffering!

Animals killed for food, battery hens, laboratory animals, animals that are trapped, poisoned, or hunted for sport. These actions aren’t illegal, but they cause suffering to more individuals than people who starve or beat their animals. ….

….So what is cruelty? In what ways do animals suffer?

….Pain. All animals with backbones (vertebrates) feel pain like we do. Hooking fish, fire branding cattle, catching animals in steel-jaw traps, cutting tails off lambs and beaks off hens, all cause pain.

….Stress and Fear. Vertebrate animals feel anxiety like we do. Transport is very stressful for animals, especially live export overseas. Being pulled out of the water and left to suffocate causes great stress to fish. Dairy calves taken from their mother after 1 day and trucked to slaughter at 1 week of age suffer greatly.

….Frustration. Animals need more than food and water for their well-being – they also need to be able to carry out the behaviour that is natural to their species. Otherwise they become frustrated and may develop abnormal behaviour, just like a mentally disturbed person. Signs of frustration can be seen in battery hens, pigs in tiny stalls, rabbits in laboratory cages, foxes and mink on fur farms, and some zoo and circus animals. ….

.Animal Cruelty in…

….Factory Farms

A chick being held with cruelty

….Animals in factory farms are treated as machines, not sentient beings who feel pain and emotions just like dogs or cats. Their welfare is disregarded in the name of profit, and they suffer horrendous conditions in mind boggling numbers. On standard commercial egg farms, hens are kept in such small cages that they cannot even lift one wing. Factory farmed animals have their beaks, tails, horns and genitals chopped off with no anesthesia. All animals on factory farms are kept intensively and painfully confined. At the end of their miserable lives, they are all sent to violent commercial slaughterhouses where stunning procedures often fail, and the animals are dismembered or skinned while still conscious.

….In order to boycott factory farm cruelty altogether, as well as the devastating effects of factory farming on the environment and human health, compassionate people all over the world are going vegan or vegetarian. ….

….Laboratories

A victim of vivisection

….Vivisection is the cutting into or dissecting of a live animal. Billions of non-human animals have been burnt, crushed, sliced, electrocuted, poisoned with toxic chemicals, and psychologically tormented in the name of scientific curiosity. What have we learned from all of this suffering? That animal research is inherently unethical, inevitably wasteful, and wholly unreliable. The U.S. squanders approximately $18 billion per year on animal experiments, much of which is funded by taxpayers, even though alternatives are less expensive and can be used repeatedly. And what do we get for our dollars? “Too much suffering for too little knowledge.” ….

….Fur Farms

The cruelty of fur farms

….More than 45 million animals worldwide, including raccoon dogs, rabbits, foxes, mink, and chinchillas, are raised in cages and killed each year for their fur. Not only are cage-raised animals killed inhumanely, but they suffer from numerous physical and behavioral abnormalities induced by the stress of caging conditions. After spending their short lives in squalid conditions, animals raised on fur farms are killed by cruel methods that preserve the pelt, such as gassing, neck-breaking and anal electrocution. Some are skinned alive!

….Animals living in the wild are the unseen victims of human exploitation.

Their lives are cruelly cut short for the sake of greed, vanity, and the so-called thrill of sadistic bloodsports

Every form of violence and cruelty imaginable is inflicted upon wild animals and yet the public is largely unaware of these abuses. ….

….Trapping

A victim of traps

….Millions of wild animals, including bobcats, coyotes, foxes, lynx, raccoons, and wolves, suffer and die in traps each year. Countless dogs and cats, deer, birds and other animals—including threatened and endangered animals—are also injured and killed each year by the indiscriminate traps. Traps, including steel-jaw leghold traps, body-gripping traps, and wire neck snares, are inhumane devices that inflict great pain and suffering. ….

….Hunting

A deer victim of hunting

….Although it was a crucial part of humans’ survival 100,000 years ago, hunting is now nothing more than a violent form of recreation that the vast majority of hunters do not need for subsistence.

….Many animals suffer prolonged, painful deaths when they are injured but not killed by hunters.

….Hunting disrupts migration and hibernation patterns and destroys families. For animals like wolves, who mate for life and live in close-knit family units, hunting can devastate entire communities. The stress that hunted animals suffer—caused by fear and the inescapable loud noises and other commotion that hunters create—also severely compromises their normal eating habits, making it hard for them to store the fat and energy that they need in order to survive the winter.

There is someting so very dreadful, so satanic... tormenting those who have never harmed us, and who cannot defend themselves, who are utterly in our power

Posted By: One Voice

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