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Looking through here you will relize that there is more animal cruelty than you would think. If you can, we would gladly except donations.

Labor lies

posted Nov 26, 2009 8:07 AM by Patrick Bauer-Blank

When you walk in to a Walmart you see employees all around you. Their there because they are lucky to have a job. You look around and you see toys, drugs, clothes etc all around you. When you take your time to look at the tag there is over a 70% it will say Made in China. Now some people will wonder "How was this made?" and in this day and age we will look on the internet. You will find stuff on sweatshops but, the company them self will say they have good labor like apple did (Read bellow)

Report on iPod Manufacturing

August 17, 2006

"Like many of you, we were concerned by reports in the press a few weeks ago alleging poor working and living conditions at a manufacturing facility in China where iPods are assembled. Our Supplier Code of Conduct mandates that suppliers of Apple products follow specific rules designed to safeguard human rights, worker health and safety, and the environment. We take any deviation from these rules very seriously.

In response to the allegations, we immediately dispatched an audit team comprised of members from our human resources, legal and operations groups to carry out a thorough investigation of the conditions at the manufacturing site. The audit covered the areas of labor standards, working and living environment, compensation, overtime and worker treatment. The team interviewed over 100 randomly selected employees representing a cross-section of line workers (83%), supervisors (9%), executives (5%), and other support personnel (3%) including security guards and custodians. They visited and inspected factory floors, dormitories, dining halls, and recreation areas. The team also reviewed thousands of documents including personnel files, payroll data, time cards, and security logs. In total, the audit spanned over 1200 person-hours and covered over one million square feet of facilities.

To ensure the accuracy of the investigation, the team cross-referenced multiple sources of information from employees, management and personnel records. For example, working hours and overtime reported in the interviews were corroborated with line-shift reports, badge reader logs, and payroll records of those specific individuals to confirm that they were paid appropriately.

We found the supplier to be in compliance in the majority of the areas audited. However, we did find violations to our Code of Conduct, as well as other areas for improvement that we are working with the supplier to address. What follows is a summary of what we’ve learned, what’s already being done in response, and our commitment to future diligence and action.


Labor Standards

The team reviewed personnel files and hiring practices and found no evidence whatsoever of the use of child labor or any form of forced labor. This review included examining security records targeted at discovering false identification papers — an important check for companies serious about preventing illegal employment of any kind.

Working and Living Environment

The manufacturing facility supports over 200,000 employees (Apple uses less than 15% of that capacity) and has the services you’d expect in a medium city. The campus includes factories, employee housing, banks, a post office, a hospital, supermarkets, and a variety of recreational facilities including soccer fields, a swimming pool, TV lounges and Internet cafes. Ten cafeterias are also located throughout the campus offering a variety of menu choices such as fresh vegetables, beef, seafood, rice, poultry, and stir-fry noodles. In addition, employees have access to 13 different restaurants on campus. Employees were pleased with the variety and quality of food offerings.

The supplier owns and leases dormitories that are offered at no charge to employees, provided they help in cleaning common areas to maintain the facility. Workers are not required to live in these dormitories, although the majority do. Our team randomly selected and inspected a wide range of dormitories (both supplier-owned on-campus and off-site leased facilities) that collectively house over 32,000 people. Buildings are separated by gender, with female dorms containing a private bathroom/shower for each room and male dorm rooms typically sharing bathroom/shower facilities. The dorms have TV rooms, potable water, private lockers, free laundry service, and public telephones. Many also have ping-pong and snooker tables, and sitting/reading areas. All of the on-campus dorms have air conditioning. Visitors are permitted in the dorms, although a sign-in process is used for security purposes.

Our audit of on-site dormitories found no violations of our Code of Conduct. We were not satisfied, however, with the living conditions of three of the off-site leased dorms that we visited. These buildings were converted by the supplier during a period of rapid growth and have served as interim housing. Two of the dormitories, originally built as factories, now contain a large number of beds and lockers in an open space, and from our perspective, felt too impersonal. The third contained triple-bunks, which in our opinion didn’t provide reasonable personal space.

To address this interim housing situation, the supplier acquired additional land and is currently building new dormitories. These plans were in place prior to our audit, and will increase the total living space by 46% during the next four months.

Compensation

Our investigation confirmed that all workers earn at least the local minimum wage, and our sample audit of payroll records showed that more than half were earning above minimum wage. Employees also have the opportunity to earn bonuses. In addition, the supplier provides a comprehensive medical plan including free annual checkups.

We did find, however, that the pay structure was unnecessarily complex. An employee’s wage was comprised of several elements (base pay, skill bonus, attendance bonus, housing allowance, meal allowance, overtime), making it difficult to understand and communicate to employees. This structure effectively failed to meet our Code of Conduct requirement that how workers are paid must be clearly conveyed. The supplier has since implemented a simplified pay structure that meets the Code of Conduct.

We also discovered that the process for reporting overtime was manual and monthly, and while not a violation of the Code of Conduct, it was subject to human error and relied too much on memory for dispute resolution. To address this issue, the supplier will link the payroll system and electronic badge system, which will automate the recording of hours worked and pay calculations. This update will be completed by October 1.

Overtime

We found no instances of forced overtime and employees confirmed in interviews that they could decline overtime requests without penalty. We did, however, find that employees worked longer hours than permitted by our Code of Conduct, which limits normal workweeks to 60 hours and requires at least one day off each week. We reviewed seven months of records from multiple shifts of different productions lines and found that the weekly limit was exceeded 35% of the time and employees worked more than six consecutive days 25% of the time. Although our Code of Conduct allows overtime limit exceptions in unusual circumstances, we believe in the importance of a healthy work-life balance and found these percentages to be excessive.

The supplier has enacted a policy change to enforce the weekly overtime limits set by our Code of Conduct. The policy change has been communicated to supervisors and employees and a management system has been implemented to track compliance with the Code of Conduct. Supervisors must receive approval from upper level management for any deviation.

Worker Treatment

Employees work in factories that are generally bright, clean and modern with air-conditioned assembly line areas, and are provided with protective gear. There’s an employee grievance process in place, including a telephone hotline, a CEO mailbox for complaints and employee suggestion boxes.

Our interviews with employees revealed areas of both satisfaction and dissatisfaction. A majority of employees interviewed were pleased with the work environment and specifically noted the opportunity for advancement, widespread year-end bonuses, and the reputation of the supplier in the industry. Additionally, employees consistently mentioned that they felt safe and secure in both the workplace and the dormitories.

Employees expressed dissatisfaction with some aspects of the workplace. The single largest complaint (approximately 20% of interviewed workers) was the lack of overtime during non-peak periods. The second largest complaint (less than 10%) was the transportation schedule for employees living in off-campus dorms, which they felt was inadequate outside of working hours. Results of the interviews have been shared with management, and will be addressed where appropriate. For example, the transportation schedule is being reviewed for adjustment.

During our interviews with employees, we explicitly asked every line worker whether they had ever been subjected to or witnessed objectionable disciplinary punishment. Two employees reported that they had been disciplined by being made to stand at attention. While we did not find this practice to be widespread, Apple has a zero tolerance policy for any instance, isolated or not, of any treatment of workers that could be interpreted as harsh. The supplier has launched an aggressive manager and employee training program to ensure such behavior does not occur in the future.


The Future

Recognizing that some aspects of workplace auditing (such as health and safety) lie beyond our current expertise, we’ve engaged the services of Verité, an internationally recognized leader in workplace standards dedicated to ensuring that people around the world work under safe, fair and legal conditions. We are committed to ensuring compliance with our Code of Conduct and will complete audits of all final assembly suppliers of Mac and iPod products in 2006.

We recognize that monitoring compliance is an ongoing process requiring continual progress reviews. When violations are discovered in any supplier, we will require corrective action plans, with a focus on prevention and systemic solutions. We will also ensure that action plans are implemented and in cases where a supplier’s efforts in this area do not meet our expectations, their contracts will be terminated.

We are encouraged with the actions to date in response to our audit. However, we realize that auditing compliance is only one step in the journey toward driving change. We have also joined the Electronic Industry Code of Conduct (EICC) Implementation Group, which has established industry-wide standards and offers valuable resources for evaluating suppliers. The EICC was a key benchmark when our own Code of Conduct was created and as an industry leader, Apple will make important contributions to this group.

Apple is committed to the highest standard of social responsibility in everything we do and will always take necessary action accordingly. We are dedicated to ensuring that working conditions are safe and employees are treated with respect and dignity wherever Apple products are made."


Now, that's all PR (Public relations) junk and the truth is the employees who were questioned have been threatened to lie about the working environment or they will be punished.

That's the first article on labor lies  

AnimalSaver.org is getting a long needed update :-)

posted Aug 28, 2009 6:29 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank

   AnimalSaver is getting a all new website sorry this is such a small post but site may be down for the next week or so

Miley Cyrus a Good Role Model?

posted Aug 1, 2009 6:15 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated Aug 3, 2009 3:01 PM by Nathan Ladd ]

    Many people say Miley Cyrus is a good role model. But is she? One of the reasons that me (Patrick) does not think she is. is that she has a multi-billion dollar deal with WalMart. What's wrong with WalMart? A: WalMart supports rodeos B: Some say we need to focus on human rights so here we go 70% of products are from Communist China. What's wrong with China? Well, there is no minimum wage and usually bad labor conditions. C: Miley Cyrus sometimes sings at rodeos. Now ask your self is she a good role model?
Well, that could be a difficult answer. Some people love her and think she is a great singer. Some people just doen't like pop in general. Now, there is a reason not to like specifically her.

McCruelty I'm Hatin it.

posted Aug 1, 2009 5:58 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated Aug 3, 2009 2:58 PM by Nathan Ladd ]

    Manypeople have been to McDonald's and don't know the truth. McDonald's sells the most amount of meat in the US alone. At a company that big they have a responsibility to take at least half decent care of there live stock. There meat is bread and killed in Communist China. Animals are hanged and get cut in the neck it's about 24 to 48 hours to fully kill the animal. Not many have complained and not much has been done.
  


Military Murder

posted Aug 1, 2009 3:01 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated Aug 3, 2009 3:03 PM by Nathan Ladd ]

Tell Obama to ban killing animals in the military. Thousands of live animals are 

shot, stabbed, burned, and poisoned every year in Department of Defense (DoD) 

They use the animals for "Training," so they don't have to use dummies. Our opinion is that that is just plain stupid. We think that every life is worth the same. That includes animals.


Please send a polite e-mail to your Congressional representative asking him or her to urge President Obama to extend his ban on torture to include animals used in military training and issue an executive order requiring the DoD to replace the use of animals in trauma and chemical-casualty training exercises with available non-animal methods.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                (Credit PETA)

More Puppy Mills

posted Jun 3, 2009 2:42 PM by Nathan Ladd   [ updated Jul 11, 2009 7:43 AM ]

The Humane Society of the United States' offensive against puppy mills continues.June 2nd, they arrived on the scene at an Indiana puppy mill, where they found more than 200 dogs in grossly overcrowded conditions. Under the temporary care of our emergency shelter, the resiliant animals already are showing signs of improvement.

Last week, the local law enforcement and The HSUS rescued nearly 400 dogs from the horrific confines of a puppy mill operation known as the Sun Valley Kennel in Kennewick, Wash. They are now busy moving these animals to local shelters, where they’ll be adopted.

Meanwhile, the Humane Society of The United States been on the ground around the clock for two weeks in Wisconsin, tending to more than 300 dogs rescued from yet another mass breeding operation.

And as if all that weren't enough, earlier in the week they raided two major dogfighting operations in eastern Alabama.

This is a remarkable pace of activity. Sadly, these missions are a common occurrence for our rescue teams. Watch this moving video of the rescue of the innocent animals of the Sun Valley Kennel in Washington state. Then please make an emergency contribution today to support these operations and others like them.

The dogs at Sun Valley -- like those in Indiana and Wisconsin -- had spent their entire lives trapped in deplorable conditions and were forced to breed continuously, all for the profit of the operator. When found, some of the animals were confined to grocery shopping carts, while others spun circles in rusty pens caked with feces. Many of the dogs suffered from malnutrition, urine burns, and overgrown nails.

Because of the efforts of their rescue teams -- along with the assistance of our partners from the animal welfare community -- their suffering is finally over. After you watch this special video, please help ensure our rescue operations can continue.

Tragically, hundreds of thousands of dogs still suffer at the hands of an industry that traps them in a cycle of misery. In the first five months of this year alone, the teams already have rescued more than 1,000 dogs from puppy mill nightmares. They won't stop until the cruelty ends.

Please help make these animal rescue operations possible. Watch our video, then make a special donation today to fund the life-saving work of our emergency response teams.

Obama and Animals

posted Apr 18, 2009 8:33 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated May 23, 2009 4:45 PM by Nathan Ladd ]

While speaking in Henderson, Nevada, Democrat Barack Obama says he won’t just be a president for the American people, but the animals too.

“What about animal rights?” a woman shouted out during the candidate’s town hall meeting outside Las Vegas after he discussed issues that relate more to humans, like war, health care and the economy.

Obama responded that he cares about animal rights very much, “not only because I have a 9-year-old and 6-year-old who want a dog.” He said he sponsored a bill to prevent horse slaughter in the Illinois state Senate and has been repeatedly endorsed by the Humane Society.

“I think how we treat our animals reflects how we treat each other,” he said. “And it’s very important that we have a president who is mindful of the cruelty that is perpetrated on animals.”

Indeed, Senator Barack Obama pledges support for nearly every animal protection bill currently pending in Congress, and he says he will work with executive agencies such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture to make their policies more humane. He has written and spoken of the important role animals play in our lives, as companions in our homes, as wildlife in their own environments, and as service animals working with law enforcement and assisting persons with disabilities.

Obama also comments on the broader links between animal cruelty and violence in society:

“I’ve repeatedly voted to increase penalties for animal cruelty and violence and, importantly, to require psychological counseling for those who engage in this behavior as part of the punishment. In addition to being unacceptable in its own stead, violence towards animals is linked with violent behavior in general, especially domestic violence, and we need to acknowledge this connection and work to treat it. Strong penalties are important and I support them, but we know that incarceration alone can’t solve all our problems. As president, I’d continue to make sure that we treat animal cruelty like the serious crime it is and address its connection to broader patterns of violence.”

During Barack Obama’s eight years as an Illinois state senator he voted in favor of at least twelve animal protection laws. These included state legislation

- to allow creation of pet trusts to provide for long-term care of companion animals,
- to upgrade penalties for cruelty to animals,
- to require psychological counseling for people who abuse animals,
- to require veterinarians to report suspected acts of cruelty and animal fighting,
- to ban slaughter of horses for human consumption—significant because Illinois was one of only two states (with Texas) where horse slaughter plants operated,
- to create additional restrictions to make it more difficult for puppy mills to operate.

Obama voted to end the federal funding of horse slaughter in 2005, and he is currently a co-sponsor of new legislation to stop horse slaughter and the export of horses for human consumption. He co-sponsored legislation to upgrade the federal penalties for dogfighting and cockfighting, and he is a co-sponsor of new legislation to ban the possession of fighting dogs and being a spectator at a dogfight. He signed a letter requesting increased funds for the enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act, Humane Methods of Slaughter Act, and the federal animal fighting law, and he also sent a letter to the National Zoo expressing his concern for the care of Toni the elephant. He has joined the fight against puppy mills, and appears in A Rare Breed of Love: The True Story of Baby and the Mission She Inspired to Help Dogs Everywhere,a new book by Jana Kohl about her rescued dog, Baby, who survived a decade in a puppy mill.

And Obama has said that “as a condition for letting me run for President, my daughters Malia and Sasha extracted a promise from Michelle and I that they could get a dog after the election, win or lose. So they’re heavily invested in this campaign, if only for it to be over so we can get our dog.”

Humane Society Endorses Barack Obama Sept 22, 2008 ~ “While we’ve endorsed hundreds of congressional candidates for election, both Democrats and Republicans, we’ve never before endorsed a presidential candidate. We have members on the left, in the center, and on the right, and we knew it could be controversial to choose either party’s candidate for the top office in the nation. But in an era of sweeping presidential power, we must weigh in on this most important political race in the country. Standing on the sidelines is no longer an option for us.
I’m proud to announce today that the HSLF board of directors — which is comprised of both Democrats and Republicans — has voted unanimously to endorse Barack Obama for President. The Obama-Biden ticket is the better choice on animal protection, and we urge all voters who care about the humane treatment of animals, no matter what their party affiliation, to vote for them.” ~ Mike Markarian, President , Humane Society Legislative Fund

Source: Humane Society Legislative Fund Endorses Obama-Biden
http://hslf.typepad.com/political_animal/2008/09/humane-society.html

Friday, April 10, 2009

Canada Seal Hunt

posted Apr 18, 2009 8:30 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated Jul 11, 2009 7:41 AM by Nathan Ladd ]

 

©2005

Brian Skerry/HSUS

Canada's annual commercial seal hunt is the largest commercial hunt of marine mammals on the planet. Facing harsh criticism the world over because of the hunt's cruelty and unsustainability, the Canadian government and fishing industry have spread much non-true-information. Here are the basic facts about the hunt.

Which Seals Are Targeted by Canada's Seal Hunt?

Harp seals are the main target of the commercial seal hunt, and to a much smaller extent, hooded seals are also killed. In 2006, 98 percent of the harp seals killed were pups under just three months of age. Do you think that is right?

Where Are the Seals Killed?

Canada's commercial seal hunt occurs on the ice floes off Canada's East Coast in two areas: the Gulf of St. Lawrence (west of Newfoundland and east of the Magdalen Islands) and the "Front" (northeast of Newfoundland).

Who Kills Seals and Why?

Sealing is an off-season activity conducted by fishermen from Canada's East Coast. They make, on average, a small fraction of their annual incomes from sealing—and the rest from commercial fisheries. Even in Newfoundland, where 90 percent of sealers live, the government estimates there are less than 6,000 fishermen who actively participate in the seal hunt each year.

How Are the Seals Killed?

The Canadian Marine Mammal Regulations, which govern the hunt, stipulate sealers may kill seals with wooden clubs, hakapiks (large ice-pick-like clubs) and guns. In the Gulf of St. Lawrence, clubs and hakapiks are the killing implement of choice, and in the Front, guns are more widely used.


 

It is important to note that each killing method is demonstrably cruel. Because sealers shoot at seals from moving boats, the pups are often only wounded. The main sealskin processing plant in Canada deducts $2 from the price they pay for the skins for each bullet hole they find—therefore sealers are loath to shoot seals more than once. As a result, wounded seals are often left to suffer in agony—many slip beneath the surface of the water where they die slowly and are never recovered.

Is the Seal Hunt Cruel?

Yes.  Shockingly, the veterinarians found that in 42 percent of the cases they studied, the seals had likely been skinned while still conscious.

Parliamentarians, journalists, and scientists who observe Canada's commercial seal hunt each year continue to report unacceptable levels of cruelty, including sealers dragging conscious seals across the ice floes with boat hooks, shooting seals and leaving them to suffer in agony, stockpiling dead and dying animals, and even skinning seals alive.

How Many Seals Are Killed Each Year?

Hundreds of thousands. In fact, over the past three years, nearly one million seals have been killed. The current kill levels are higher than they have been in half a century. During the 2006 hunt, the Canadian government allowed fishermen to club and shoot at least 354,344 seals. The last time seals were killed at this rate—in the 1950s and '60s—the harp seal population was reduced by nearly two thirds.

And the actual number of seals killed is probably far higher than the number reported. Many seals are shot at and injured in the course of the hunt, and studies suggest that a significant number of these animals slip beneath the surface of the water, where they die slowly and are never recovered.

Are There Any Penalties When Hunters Exceed the Government's Quota?

No. In 2002, the Canadian government knowingly allowed sealers to exceed the quota by more than 37,000 animals. Sealers had already killed substantially more than the quota allowed by May 15 (the regulated closing date of the seal hunt), and yet the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans chose to extend the sealing season until June. In 2004, sealers killed close to 16,000 seals more than the permitted quota. Again, the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans extended the sealing season until well into June.

What Products Are Made from Seals?

Seals are killed primarily for their fur, which is used to produce fashion garments and other items. There is a small market for seal oil (both for industrial purposes and for human consumption).

Is the Seal Hunt Economically Important?

No. Sealing is an off-season activity conducted by fishermen from Canada's East Coast. They make, on average, one twentieth of their incomes from seal hunting and the rest from commercial fisheries. Even in Newfoundland, where 90 percent of sealers live, revenues from the hunt account for less than 1 percent of the province's economy and only 2 percent of the landed value of the fishery. According to the Newfoundland government, out of a population of half a million people, less than 6,000 fishermen participate in the seal hunt each year.

The commercial seal hunt is an activity that Canada's federal government could easily replace with economic alternatives, should it choose to do so. One option is a government buy-out. The HSUS and HSI advocate that the sealers ask the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) to buy back their sealing licences.  This will ensure that the sealers receive fair compensation for the additional income they make from participating in the commercial seal hunt each year.  When Canada ended its commercial whale hunt, it did so through exactly this sort of license buyout scheme.  As sealing licenses are sold by the DFO, only the DFO can buy them back.  The DFO is the only entity that can bring an end to the commercial seal hunt.  Senior officials from DFO have made clear that the only condition under which it will end the commercial seal hunt is if and when the sealer/fishermen ask for it to be ended. For this reason, we are working hard through the ProtectSeals boycott of Canadian seafood to provide adequate motivation to Canada's sealer/fishermen to retire their hakapiks and rifles and focus exclusively on fishing in the future.  In 2008, only 1.3 percent of the landed value of seafood in Newfoundland came from the seal hunt. The rest came from seafood.

Does the Government Subsidize the Hunt?

Yes. According to reports from the Canadian Institute for Business and the Environment, more than $20 million in subsidies were provided to the sealing industry between 1995 and 2001. Those subsidies came from entities such as the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, Human Resources Development Council, and Canada Economic Development–Quebec. These subsidies take a variety of forms, including funding the salaries for seal processing plant workers, market research and development trips, and capital acquisitions for processing plants. In 2004, more than $400,000 was provided by the Canadian government to companies for the development of seal products, and as recently as April 2007, the Canadian Coast Guard—at the taxpayer's expense—broke through the ice for the sealing vessels as it does each year. In 2007, the Canadian Coast Guard estimates that it spent an additional $3.5 million rescuing sealing vessels.

Moreover, Canada's commercial seal hunt is also indirectly subsidized by the Norwegian government. A Norwegian company purchases close to 80% of the sealskins produced in Canada in any given year through its Canadian subsidiary. These skins are shipped in an unprocessed state directly to Norway, where they are tanned and re-exported. The Norwegian government provides significant financial assistance to this company each year.

Is It True Seals Are Jeopardizing the Canadian Cod Fishery?

There is no evidence to support this contention. Some fishing industry lobby groups try to claim that seals must be culled to protect fish stocks, but nothing could be further from the truth.

The scientific community agrees that the true cause of the depletion of fish stocks off Canada's East Coast is human over-fishing. Blaming seals for disappearing fish is a convenient way for the fishing industry to divert attention from its irresponsible and environmentally destructive practices that continue today.

In truth, seals, like all marine mammals, are a vital part of the ecosystem of the Northwest Atlantic. Harp seals, which are the primary target of the hunt, are opportunistic feeders, meaning they eat many different species. So while approximately 3 percent of a harp seal's diet may be commercially fished cod, harp seals also eat many significant predators of cod, such as squid. That is why some scientists are concerned that culling harp seals could further inhibit recovery of commercially valuable fish stocks in the Northwest Atlantic.

Are Seals Overpopulated?

No. The Canadian government and sealing industry have, at various times, tried to claim that the harp seal population has "tripled" over the past three decades, or that the harp seal population is "exploding," or that seals are overpopulated.

This is misleading at best. The harp seal population in the Northwest Atlantic is the world's largest; it is a migratory population that spans the distance between Canada and Greenland, and is supposed to number in the many millions.

In the 1950s and '60s, over-hunting wiped out close to two-thirds of the harp seal population. By 1974, the population was considered to be in serious trouble, and senior government scientists recommended suspending the commercial hunt  for at least 10 years.

In the early 1980s, the European Union banned the import of whitecoat seal skins, effectively removing the principal market for the hunt at the time. For the next decade, the numbers of seals killed in the hunt dramatically declined, and the harp seal population began to recover.

But in the 1990s, the Canadian government rejuvenated the commercial seal hunt through massive subsidies. And with nearly one million seal pups killed in the past three years alone, we can only wonder what the impact will be on the harp seal population in coming years. Scientists have already sounded the alarm regarding the poor science used by the Canadian government to set quotas for the number of seals killed.

 from www.hsus.org 

from hsus.org

Canada seal hunt

 
 

Bullfighting is not what you think

posted Apr 18, 2009 8:27 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated Aug 5, 2009 6:42 AM by Nathan Ladd ]

  1. Many people think bull fighting is a man showing bravery and courage, but we think it is plain old cruelty to animals. Also most people don’t really know what bull fighting is. Often it is called a “sport” but, we think it is just a poor bull going in to a death pit. It starts at about 5 other people or a gang antagonizing the bull long before the matador even arrives. The matador stabs the bull in the heart which is "supposed" to kill the bull right there, but most of the time the bull isn’t dead.  When everyone claps and cheers the matador stabs him again! With a dagger in the bull’s head many times till he looks dead.

  2.  Let’s start with the bulls. They are raised in places like puppy mills.  There are a lot of bulls because once one is sold to a bull fighting arena, they are probably going to be killed.So it’s not like you can use the bull again. Meaning that they need a new innocent bull to butcher. The bull is locked in a metal cage with no food, water, or sunlight for more than 4 hours. Then right before they let it in to the arena they get speared with a ribbon then let out. Then the bull races out, not because it is angry but because it is frightened and confused. When he enters he is already injured. Bulls are also highly drugged In the ring 5 to 10 people stab the bull with short spears that cause massive blood loss. They get stuck in the bull’s skin and as he run around in panic and pain it cuts him even more. Every time he moves it cuts deeper into his skin. The spears are decorated and the crowd claps and cheers when one is stabbed into a bull. Also people sometimes use horses, but, they are blindfolded and uses as targets.  When the bull charges at the horse, the person riding him spears the bull in the neck and shoulders. 


    1. At the end of the event, when the bull looks dead and has been thorough beaten up and after being stabbed numerous times it is hooked to some horses and dragged away. We have nothing against Mexican, Spanish, and Latin cultures that do this “sport" we just wish that the poor bulls wouldn't be hurt at all.




Steer Busting: The Most Deadly Sport in Rodeo (Updated)

posted Apr 18, 2009 8:16 PM by Patrick Bauer-Blank   [ updated Jul 11, 2009 7:39 AM by Nathan Ladd ]

Steer Busting: The Most Deadly Sport in Rodeo (Updated)

The official name is steer roping, but most people call it steer busting. Read this and learn why.

The rodeo announcer lies about animal injuries and deaths very commonly, so we'll never know how many innocent animals have been slaughtered for the entertainment of people, or even if the announcer is telling the truth. However, we do know that the number of slaughtered animals in steer busting is the highest of any other sport.

At the 2004 National Steer Busting Finals in Amarillo, Texas, SHARK video-documented nine dead or crippled and likely doomed animals dragged out of the arena. A tenth staggered out while bleeding from the mouth. So much for these cowboys' claims of caring about animals.

Steer roping is so cruel, it isn't even allowed in most states! But does the rodeo announcer bother us with the information? No. This is what they said: "Steer roping is one of professional rodeo's oldest events, but it is held only at select rodeos because of its requirement for large arenas." That is just another rodeo lie.


The fact that the steer busting national finals are always held in a separate and remote location like Hobbs, New Mexico, when all the other National Finals events are held in Las Vegas, is almost a sure sign of it being illegal in some states.  

 

We hoped that this piece has "enlightened" you. To help, click on shop. If you buy something, all of the money that we get goes to help stop steer busting. The rest goes to making the item that you bought.


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