where is the home for the black labrador it is now or never....please help...he has friends....transportation can be arranged contact linner47@adelphia.net
The Humane Society newsletter arrived this weekend, and in it was this photo of a raccoon dog, taken to the market in China. Thousands of raccoon dogs are being skinned at public markets in China, and their fur is being sold to clothing manufacturers.
-LA Activists followed a South Central "Shelter" garbage truck filled with the dead bodies of cats, dogs, puppies, kittens, songbirds, and wildlife. These garbage trucks filled with these poor, miserable animals are taken to a disposal plant where they
In case you hadn’t heard, FBI Deputy Assistant Director John Lewis has identified the number one domestic terrorist threat to the U.S. and it’s not radical Muslims. Or right-wing paramilitary types. Or gun-toting pro-lifers. Nope, guess again. It’s animal rights and environmental activists who have never hurt or killed a single person in the U.S. in their 25-year history.
What they have done is cause millions of dollars in damages and even more in lost profits to the logging, construction, SUV, pharmaceutical, and fur industries—all of which (with the exception of the fur industry) are major lobbying powers in Congress.
Among the many opportunistic post-9/11 agendas pursued by the outgoing Republican majority is a drastic increase in funds, per- sonnel, and judicial leeway granted to law enforcement agencies like the FBI and the Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) for pursuing grassroots animal rights activists. Some cases in point: in 2002, over 100 FBI agents investigated a single animal rights group, Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty USA (SHAC-USA). PATRIOT Act- sanctioned wiretaps of phones and emails of animal activists have become commonplace, as have airport detentions on both domestic and international flights for members of non-profits like Hugs For Puppies and Student Organization for Animal Rights chapters. FBI employees and FBI-backed investigators have engaged in romantic and sexual relationships with activists to try to pry information out of them. Raids on the homes of activists by armed JTTF agents are also a regular occurrence. In November 2006 seven individuals in Santa Monica, California had their homes ransacked by government agents for the “crime” of attending a peaceful demonstration against the POM Juice Company, which funds animal tests. One of these individuals was former child star Pam Ferdin, the voice of Lucy in the classic Peanuts television show. Lucy getting her house raided by the JTTF? It’s enough to make even Snoopy cry.
But not enough, apparently, for the federal government. In a much-touted case, six volunteers with SHAC-USA were each sentenced in September 2006 to up to six years in federal prison for operating a website and newsletter and organizing protests at the homes of pharmaceutical executives. On November 27, 2006 President Bush signed into law the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), a bill which labels as terrorists those who engage in sit-ins, civil disobedience, trespass, or any other crime in the name of animal rights.
To be clear, this bill is not aimed at squeaky clean groups like the Humane Society or even at the controversial People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)— both of which have the financial and legal resources to take on spurious charges. AETA, and the corresponding crackdown, is aimed at grassroots animal activists who lend their weekends and occasional evenings towards speaking out against cruelty to animals. Most have little money, no legal experience, and often belong to informal volunteer organizations.
The nature of the Bush administration’s war on grassroots animal activists bears similarities to that of the war in Iraq. The first is the use of loaded language and fear- mongering to create an easy to loathe enemy. Iraq was part of an “axis of evil” and supposedly had weapons of mass destruction it planned to use against the U.S. Animal activists are “domestic terrorists” out to end scientific research and attack anyone with a piece of meat on their plate. Second is the violation of the civil liberties of a now-marginalized group. Third, the war against this perceived terror threat is being waged even though a majority of Americans don’t see a need for it and don’t want to pay for it. Ask a dozen people on the street to list their top ten safety concerns and you can be sure “animal rights activists” won’t be making it onto any of those lists. They probably wouldn’t even crack the top 100.
The final similarity is that the bottom line is corporate profit. The industries targeted by animal activists are wealthy, influential, and, apparently, very vulnerable. Take, for instance, Huntingdon Life Sciences (HL, a major contract animal testing laboratory based in New Jersey and targeted by animal rights groups like SHAC USA after undercover exposes showed a worker punching four-month-old puppies in the face. Focused protest pressure in the U.S. and abroad has left HLS $100 million in debt, kicked off of every stock exchange in the world, and forced to sell all of its property just to stay afloat. Major pharmaceutical companies like Roche, Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, and others have been targeted by activists for contracting experiments at Hunting- don; many have responded by cutting their financial support for HLS.
International protest in the UK against Huntingdon Life Sciences &mdashhoto from www.indymedia.org.uk
In light of such activist success, it is no wonder the pharmaceutical industry—like the logging, construction, and auto industries—is clamoring for activists to be stopped. Given their lobbying muscle, it is also no surprise that they have been able to push through prosecutions and legislation that civil liberties groups find draconian and unconstitutional. Yet for all the resources poured into this domestic “war on terrorism” and for all its infringement on the civil liberties of law-abiding animal advocates, does the Bush administration at least have tangible success to point to in an attempt to justify its actions? As in Iraq, the answer is an unequivocal no.
Grassroots animal activists, though angered and sometimes scared by the increasing government attention to their movement, have nonetheless carried on as before. Groups like the Animal Liberation Front, which engage in illegal direct action by freeing animals or destroying the property of company executives, have, if anything, been inspired to heightened activity by the government’s actions. The year following the indictment of the SHAC USA defendants saw more illegal actions directed against Huntingdon than in any previous year. Just days after the defendants were sentenced in September 2006, ALF members broke into an animal testing lab in Massachusetts and rescued two dozen rabbits. In the weeks after AETA was signed into law, animal activists seem to have intensified grassroots activity as four separate actions, hundreds of freed animals, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages were claimed by anonymous activists.
Still, the breadth of the animal rights underground should not be overstated. The number of illegal actions claimed each year numbers in the dozens, not the hundreds or thousands. And (this bears repeating) no one has ever gotten hurt. Economic damage has been done, but even the most committed activists don’t come close to the financial thievery perpetrated by the companies they target. GlaxoSmith- Kline, for example, bilked the U.S. public out of $7 billion in taxes by under-reporting its profits, according to the IRS. Their punishment? In September they struck a deal to pay $3 billion, or less than half of what they actually owed. In one year this company has done 50 times more economic damage than animal rights activists have done in the past 25 years.
As in Iraq, the best solution would be to increase the power that the public has to affect issues that concern them—even if that causes financial setbacks for big corporations. After all, isn’t that what democracy is all about? Yet in the U.S., where 86 percent of the public finds the conditions egg-laying hens are kept in to be unacceptable, any bill to end such practices would be summarily shot down by the agriculture lobby—if it was even lucky enough to get introduced. It is no wonder, then, that in the last year activists have repeatedly broken into chicken, turkey, and egg farms to free animals or collect video documentation of conditions.
Animal activists&mdasherhaps more committed, focused, and willing to sacrifice for their cause than any other grassroots social justice movement today in the U.S.—are not going away. The Bush administration’s response to their issues has been as much a farce and a failure as it has been in the Middle East.
Z
For more information on how you can support the campaign to stop the killing at Huntingdon Life Sciences....
Sorry about this! Meeting place for the The SHAC (Stop Huntington Animal Cruelty) demo against Huntington Life Sciences is in front of the Granville Street Skytrain Station not the art gallery. The meeting time is at 3pm on Friday April 6th.
WAR LAUNCHES OPERATION: HELTER SKELTER "LSR Puppy Killers NOT Welcome on Wall Street"
1st Weekend of Action January 20 & 21, 2007
Huntingdon Life Sciences (HL trading under the ticker symbol LSR, is a company whose primary business is death and suffering. 500 animals are killed there every day to test products like toothpaste and tanning lotion. They are poisoned, they are cut and burned, they have limbs broken and on top of that they have to endure the cruelty of sadistic technicians who have been proven, in 5 undercover investigations and a recent whistleblower report, to abuse and torture the animals in their care.
Prior to December 22, 2006, HLS was not listed on any reputable exchange, had no market makers and was over $80 million in debt and losing customers and suppliers by the score. NYSE Arca listed LSR to protect the NYSE from threatened litigation. NYSE caved in to the pressure. Investors expect more from the NYSE. The public expects financial transparency, business integrity and high ethical standards from the NYSE. Instead NYSE made a deal that got them “off the hook” while betraying the public trust.
Win Animal Rights now declares WAR against those who would enable the killing at HLS/LSR to continue unabated. The NYSE and anyone connected to it, including: staff, market makers, specialists, investors, and support organizations are all legitimate focal points of this educational information campaign. We will bring our message to where they work, where they live and where they spend their leisure time.
Operation: Helter Skelter New York City Weekend of Action January 20 - 21, 2007
Saturday, Jan. 20, 2007 - Meet at Lexington Avenue and 86th Street at 4:00 PM Sunday, Jan. 21, 2007 - Meet at Lexington Avenue and 86th Street at 4:00 PM
***Join us for a vegan dinner at a local restaurant after the demos***
------------------------------------------ W.A.R. (WIN ANIMAL RIGHT is an independent non-profit organization not affiliated or associated with SHAC, SHAC USA or any other group or organization and does not conduct or incite any illegal activity. The above information is not meant to incite or request any illegal actions or illegal activities of any kind. If you have any questions about the legality of any act, we encourage everyone receiving this (or the) action alert(s) to check your local laws and ordinances before proceeding to do anything. No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.16.12/631 - Release Date: 1/16/2007 8:25 AM
To kick off our 1st Day of Xmas, we turn to the words of imprisoned SHAC activist, Natasha Avery, for an inspirational call to action:
"Thank you for all of your incredible support, all the more moving when it comes from all of you out there free and fighting the abusers all over the world. To hear that you will fight for the animals even harder because your comrades are imprisoned is all that any of us in jail want to hear and it means we can use our time away profitably for animal liberation.
Now is not the time for apathy. Now is not the time for excuses. Now is not the time for doing the police's job for them. Now is the time for action.
HLS is the worst kind of evil, evil that masquerades as good. HLS is conspiracy to murder, on a vast unimaginable scale. 70,000 animals trapped inside there, 500 animals killed a day. Just numbers until you stand outside those gates as I did in the weeks before being sent to jail, and then as you see the murderers driving out, laughing at their crimes, you feel pure evil, tangible; you see it in the workers faces, you feel the millions of of animals they have coldly callously murdered crying out for justice, and you feel the animals trapped inside HLS calling out for freedom.
It was my privilege to demonstrate at HLS with a 16 year old activist from Italy, and to stand beside her as she screamed in pure rage and hatred at the murderers driving home, with tears pouring down her face at the horror of it all.
We all need to feel that rage, we all need to feel that anger and we all need to act on it. Every movement and every struggle throughout history has achieved victory through total commitment, total devotion and total sacrifice, and our movement is no different to the great struggles for justice in the past.
Animal rights is not a hobby, not a past-time. It is a struggle with life on one side and death on the other, and the outcome depends on every single one of us. Millions of lives, innocent, helpless, terrified lives, depend on our actions, and our actions only, to win victory and achieve their liberation.
We all need to fight for the animals with all our heart and soul, as if our own lives depended on it. They deserve nothing else. They wait for us to act, trapped in their prisons, in filthy sheds, tiny cages, caught in nets, driven into lorries and taken away to be murdered in slaughterhouses, skinned alive for their fur.
Every day we fail to act, every action we fail to take is a betrayal to those we claim to hold most dear. Who among us can honestly say that there isn't a hell of a lot more we could do to achieve animal liberation? Not a single one of us.
So make those calls, send those e-mails, get out on demos. Act and act now. There is not a second to lose. The animals are counting on us. The animals await their liberation. The rest is up to each and every single one of us.
For animal liberation
Natasha Avery (Originally published in Bite Back Magazine # 11....Natasha's prison address will be published in tomorrow's alert)
With these words in mind, consider sending a Merry Xmas message to the murderers at Huntingdon Life Sciences.
Huntingdon Life Sciences Barric Lane Occold Suffolk IP23 7PX UK Tel: 01379 644 122 Fax: 01379 678 034 Email: sales@ukorg.huntingdon.com
As always, please keep all correspondence polite and educational. Pictures are a great way to educate the public about the horrors of animal testing and vivisection.
------------------------------------------ W.A.R. (WIN ANIMAL RIGHT is an independent non-profit organization not affiliated or associated with SHAC, SHAC USA or any other group or organization and does not conduct or incite any illegal activity. The above information is not meant to incite or request any illegal actions or illegal activities of any kind. If you have any questions about the legality of any act, we encourage everyone receiving this (or the) action alert(s) to check your local laws and ordinances before proceeding to do anything. No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.15.18/586 - Release Date: 12/13/2006 6:13 PM
A man who owned a horse
for 6 years only gets
probation for starving
him to death!!
Where's the justice?
By Andrew Helton
Target: Sonoma County
Judge Robert LaForge
Goal: Give man who
starved horse to death a
stronger sentence
...
Chris Buehler,
administrator and founder
of Oreo’s Kitty
Rescue, a small home
based kitty rescue,
working to help save
homeless kitties with
food vet care, including
TNR, and finding good
furever homes for them,
was recently
diagnos...
Chris Buehler,
administrator and founder
of Oreo’s Kitty
Rescue, a small home
based kitty rescue,
working to help save
homeless kitties with
food vet care, including
TNR, and finding good
furever homes for them,
was recently
diagnose...
The largest genocide in
human history happened
where? Most people would
answer Germany, and the
Jewish Holocaust.
Actually though, the
largest genocide happened
in the USA, with the
native American Indians,
with estimates of 19
million to 100 millio...
Ever since I saw that
horrific pic of the
bricks pelting
''Windstar'' the
beautiful white horse, I
can't get it out of my
mind. To think a group of
people--or maybe it was
an individual!--would
actually do something
like that totally blows
my min...
Official Nuclear
Radiation Study; Tokyo
University
Hayno, R.S., et al
(2013) Internal
Radiocesium Contamination
of Adults and Children 7
to 20 Months After the
Fukushima NPP Accident as
Measured by Extensive
Whole-Body-Counter
Surveys, Proc. Jpn....
Toxic radiation
accumulates in water
supplies after nuclear
accidents. Radiation
bioconcentrates in fish
that live in fresh water
and salt water. Runoff of
fresh water from land
which has been
contaminated ends up
contaminating oceans, and
salt wate...
66 Atomic Bombs were
exploded on the Bikini
Island Atolls. Hundreds
of islanders were removed
from the islands, but not
from harms way. One
hydrogen bomb exploded
near the islands, and the
children played with the
dust from the bomb, as it
fel...
"Under our current law,
a suspected terrorist on
the FBI's No-Fly List
can't board an airplane
-- but they can still
legally purchase guns and
explosives.
This loophole, known
as the
âTerror
Gap,â
is ...