Humane Foundation

A Global Community fo a more sustainable and humane world.

The Humane Foundation is a non profit organization mainly dedicated to advance humane education and community participation.The Humane Foundation is interested in Global Issues grouped in four main areas of concern:1- Social Justice and Humane Rights.2- The Influence of Culture in our daily choices.3- Environmental Ethics.4- Animal Protection, Walfare and R ...learn more

GROUP DETAILS

Created: Apr 06, 2008

Updated: Nov 25, 2009

Membership: Open

Semi-Private

Created: May 15, 2008
Updated: Feb 19, 2009
Viewed: 256 times

Topic: Animal Rights, Welfare and Protection Education

Posts (1 - 4 of 4)

Sort by: Ascending | Descending
Login to Post a Reply.
Sm_avatar
Let's contribute with ideas and resources to bring Animal Rights, Welfare and Protection to the classroom and the community.
Sm_avatar

According to the Institute of Humane Education humans have granted protections to certain animals under certain conditions. What is illegal if done to a dog or parakeet may be perfectly legal when done to a cow or chicken. And while there are many laws protecting dogs and cats in peoples’ homes, these laws do not apply to dogs, cats, or any other animals in laboratories. In other words, our relationships with animals are inconsistent, based upon our feelings, our traditions, and our habits, and not upon their inherent capacity to suffer or their intrinsic value.

 

Animals are used, and abused, in many industries – food, entertainment, research, fashion, the military, education, the pet trade, and more. By far the greatest abuse is found in the food industry, where tens of billions of animals are killed every year. Factory farming, the name given to industrial animal agriculture, is inherently cruel. Animals are routinely mutilated without anesthesia (e.g., tail docking, dehorning, debeaking, castrating, branding), and are confined so intensively that normal behaviors are impossible. Modern, sped up slaughter lines often result in animals being dismembered while still conscious.

 

Ironically, the harm we cause to animals often harms us and the environment, again reminding us of the connections among issues. For example, when a “lagoon” holding pig excrement in a North Carolina hog factory burst, it flooded into nearby rivers and streams, contaminating water supplies and killing tens of thousands of fish. Routine use of antibiotics in animal feed has led to resistant strains of bacteria and diminished efficacy of antibiotics in general.

Sm_avatar

Humane treatment of animals would/could go hand in hand with improvements in personal and public health, more humane and equitable treatment of farm and meat processing workers, and improvement and protection of the environment.

 

We need to totally and fundamentally reform the meat and related industries. We could try legislation, I suppose, but that would be unpopular and impossible to implement. What we need to do is educate about the problems, devise appropriate alternative solutions, educate with respect to the solutions, and find a way to allocate funds to implement the reforms.

 

I have devised a very comprehensive Ecological Economic Plan which begins with reform of financial systems and intends to deal with a transition to an ecological culture in which no one gets hurt. You can read about my work by going to www.peoplesequityunion.blogspot.com .

 

I look forward to continuing discussions on this topic.

 

 

With much love and care,

 

Mike Morin

mlarosamorin@earthlink.net">mlarosamorin@earthlink.net

(541) 343-3808

 

Sm_avatar

There is no worldwide agreement that protects the welfare of animals either in the wild or those involved in research and testing. While UK law says that alternative methods should be used if they are available, there is no specific legal requirement to look for those alternatives.

 

FRAME (Fund for the Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments www.frame.org.uk)  is a not-for-profit organisation that carries out office-based research and has its own laboratory in collaboration with The University of Nottingham Medical School, where studies into valid alternatives to animal testing can be investigated. Research funded by FRAME has already made a significant contribution to reducing the number of animals used in research and testing.

 

FRAME believes that the current scale of animal experimentation is unacceptable. It understands that an immediate end to animal testing is impossible, but campaigns for change by advocating the Three Rs strategy – Replacement, Reduction, Refinement.

 

Wherever possible, current testing on animals should be replaced with other methods that do not use animals.  If there is no effective and reliable alternative, FRAME believes the numbers of animals involved should be reduced as far as possible, and the procedures applied should be refined to minimise the pain and distress experienced by those that are used.

You do not have access to post to this record
1 to 4 of 4 Posts


Contributors to this Page