February, 2010

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Happiness is a…wait, what?

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

The meat industry has a history of making wise public relations decisions! (TotallyLooksLike.com)

Today I found out that apparently, the meat industry has a new slogan that they’re preparing to unveil:

Happiness is a Dead Animal

I swear I am not making this up.  In a time when people are more and more concerned about whether the animals they kill for food were treated in a humane fashion, the meat industry has come up a slogan that basically mocks everyone involved.   If this is the best they can come up with, I suggest–nay, I demand–that the industry use it as much as possible.

If the Ag industry wants to win the hearts of those who eat meat, why not show what changes you’re making to decrease animal suffering? Suggestions like this one only prove how nervous the industry is over animal rights campaigns. If only they realized that taking the “moral high ground” meant actually listening and enacting changes rather than weaving death and happiness into a rallying cry. (from VegDaily)

This is going to go over great.

Love, nudity and the Olympics

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Today is Valentines Day – a perfect day to spread the message of love and compassion to the Olympics fans and media.

Special thanks go out to our friends Genny and Michelle for organizing this great event!

This is by far the funnest and most positive demo we’ve had so far during the Olympics.  Activists stood naked on top of the steps of the Art Gallery while chanting “make love, not fur”, “love in, fur out” and “we’d rather go naked than wear fur”.

We had such a positive reception from the crowd, that some even took off their clothes to join in on the fun.  Media was everywhere taking photos and videos of us.  Even Russian Television couldn’t resist covering our little love fest.

Silly people, fur belongs to animals!

Wow, I wanna be fur free and naked when I grow up

My turn to get a photo taken with the naked guy!

We stood naked on the steps  of the Art Gallery for nearly two hours getting photos taken with tourists.  Men, women, teens, parents with children all wanted photos with us. Even a few women wearing fur a photo.  The best part is that along with the photo they took away a positive education regarding the cruelty of their fashion choice.

This was a very successful demo. Even the weather cooperated.  I think it was the warmest winter day ever!

Don’t worry if you missed today’s little demo. We’re not done getting naked for the tourists and cameras just yet.  There will be more skin to see in the weeks to come.

Olympic lesson: not all protests are the same

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

The Olympics is a great time to get exposure for issues happening in Canada in the international media.  The city is overflowing with media and people.

Yesterday just happened to be the 21st annual National Anti Fur Day.  Protests were held all across Canada against the fur industry.  We were handing out leaflets and raising awareness about the plight of fur bearing animals brutally skinned for Snow Flake Furs at Fairmont Hotel. We got tons of signatures and support from everyone walking by. There’s a great group of elderly citizens who go out to the fur Store every Friday from 11am-1pm.  So if you missed NAFD, you can still help out every Friday.

National Anti-Fur Day protest at Snowflake Furs

Collecting petitions

After the fur protest, some of us joined up with the anti-Olympic march happening downtown. The reports vary from 1,500 to 3,000 participants.  It was certainly the largest protest we’ve ever joined. The peaceful marching clogged up the traffic. Banners were waving from all different groups, ranging from anti tar sands groups to anti poverty groups.

And of course, the one and only message at the march representing animals was our anti seal hunt banner.   It was peaceful and, collectively, we made a very powerful statement to the Olympic organizers.  International media was on top of parking garages and trailing the march to get coverage.  I’ve never seen so many media cameras in my life.

Today, another march was organized for 8am this morning.  Thinking that it was going to be like any other Olympic protest, we made banners and got dressed in our warm clothes to go.  When we got there, we noticed that the attendees were much younger this time and many dressed in black.  There were only a few hundred people this time, but we assumed the low turnout was due to the earliness of the event.

The march was advertised as “Heart Attack: street march to clog the arteries of capitalism.”  So it was not very surprising that the route was not published and the leaders of the protests made turns unexpectedly.

However, after marching for about half an hour, things started to get weird.  People started to tip over mail boxes and spray paint things.  We continued the march for a few more minutes and came upon more tipped mail boxes and garbage cans.

At that point we decided to pull our group out of the march.  And we collectively agreed that the animals cannot be represented at this kind of an event.  As we stood on the sidewalk to put away our banners, police in riot gear started to arrive and  Helicopters were circling overhead.  It was definitely not the kind of protest we wanted to be a part of.

It was very disheartening to see the destructive tactics being used by some protesters to get attention for their cause.

Next time, we will be sure to do a lot more research before joining up with a protest organized by someone else!

CBS report on antibiotic use

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

CBS News has run a 2-part story on the use of antibiotics in livestock. If you are interested at all in the health implications of animal farming, you will likely find these videos informative.

I have written in the past about some of the health risks of antibiotic resistant diseases that develop as a result of the giant petri dishes these people call “farms.”

Here is a link to part 1:

Animal Antibiotics a Threat?

And part 2:

Antibiotic-free Animals

The situation in Canada is quite likely very similar, since our agricultural systems are virtually identical to the United States, and farmers here are just as free to use antibiotics in animal feed. I will try to write a post specifically about antibiotic use and antibiotic-resistant diseases in Canada in the near future.

Film screening: changing hearts and minds

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

The Eyes Wide Open Film Screening Series kicked off last Saturday with Earthlings.

In the next couple of months, Liberation BC will be screening two other films:  Fowl Play, a documentary about the egg industry; and Meat the Truth, a documentary about the environmental impact of meat consumption.

If the series proves to be successful and funding is available, we will continue to screen films throughout the year.  Though we’ve never screened films in the past, we’ve always found video to be extremely powerful in reaching out to the public.   In my experience, you can argue until you are blue in the face about animal suffering without any impact but the moment you show video footage of that suffering, it is immediately understood. This is why we always had a television with us when we did any outreach work on the streets.

150 people came to the Earthlings screening.  The room we rented at the public library had a capacity for 130 people but we managed to fit everyone into the room.

Earthlings DVD

Earthlings, as those who have seen it will know, is not a particularly easy film to watch from beginning to end. It impressed and surprised me how many people did stick it out to the bitter end.  Only about 20 people left in the middle of the film. For the 130 who stayed, I admire their courage and commitment to the truth no matter how ugly it may be.

After the film finished we had an open Q&A session.  One woman wanted to know how we could get this film shown to meat-eaters as she assumed that everyone in the room was vegetarian like herself.  In response to this question, we did a quick survey of the room and discovered about half of the people there were not vegetarians.  We put a lot of effort into promoting this screening outside of the animal rights community and so I was pleased that so many of the general public did show up to the screening.

At the Q&A, some people wanted to know where to buy “humane meat”, some wanted to know what vegetarians ate and some wanted to justify omnivorism.  It was interesting to hear the debate focusing solely on eating animals when the film was clearly divided into four segments: pets, food,fashion, entertainment and science.

Could this be an indication that people are becoming aware and distrustful about the practices of the food industry?  Whatever the reason, it’s nice to see people questioning the food on their plates.

We handed out comment cards and received close to 80 of them back.  The majority of the people commented that they had not previously seen Earthlings and had learned something new from the film.

We are hoping these films will provide a platform for people to start talking and thinking about issues concerning animals.  Unlike advertising for KFC and McDonald’s, information about animal cruelty is not just going to jump out at people wherever they go.  But we can try to make the information more easily accessible by keeping these screenings free and at a central location.

In order to pay for the space, and not charge admissions, we rely on your donations.  If you think these screenings are valuable, please consider making a contribution to Liberation BC.

The Voice of Agriculture?

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Fighting public opinion, tooth and nail

I’m not even quite sure where to start with this one. Apparently HSUS (Humane Society of the United States) has worked with a company called Sonic, which runs a chain of drive-in restaurants across the United States, to switch to cage-free eggs and pig meat from farms that don’t use gestation crates.

Here’s what the kind and loving folks at the Kansas Farm Bureau (“The Voice of Agriculture”) had to say in a letter to Sonic’s CEO:

When our members learned that the Humane Society of the United States was publicly applauding your decision to begin phasing in cage-free eggs and acquiring pork from facilities that do not use breeding hog gestation stalls, they were upset, to say the very least.

The letter goes on to describe HSUS as

a powerful, well-funded activist organization pursuing what most reasonable observers would consider an extreme anti-animal agenda.

Apparently wanting animals to be able to live with enough space so they can stand up, turn around, and stretch their limbs is “anti-animal.” Of course, in contrast they are saying that “farmers” who confine chickens in battery cages and keep animals indoors, on concrete floors, in crates that prevent them from turning around or engaging in pretty much anything normal pigs do, like rooting in the mud, searching for food, preparing their bed at night and so on, are “pro-animal.”

I’d say maybe “pro-meat” or “pro-suffering” or “pro-profit” but certainly not “pro-animal.” But what do I know? I only grew up around animals, spent a great deal of my life caring for animals, and have experienced animals being able to live with the freedom to be the animals they have evolved to be, not the animals that profit has forced them to be.

They see this small (and I mean tiny) step as a threat to the entire American way of life:

HSUS seeks to remove meat from our dinner tables, leather goods from our closets, animals from zoos and circuses and eventually – pets from our families.

Steve Baccus, the President of the Kansas Farm Bureau, writes of “thoughtful, common sense folks” but he doesn’t seem to realize that public opinion is really moving against the treatment of animals as “production units” who can treated in whatever manner as long as it is profitable.

He really just comes off as paranoid. Meeting these minimal animal welfare standards is a far cry from the horrific apocalypse that he is predicting. I mean, it’s not as if Sonic is switching their menu to vegan or making any real changes. Switching to cage-free eggs is a no-effort switch, since the same suppliers carry both kinds of eggs and the cost is basically the same. Conditions are only marginally better for cage-free hens.

If I lived in Kansas I would be asking my “Voice of Agriculture” why they aren’t on the leading edge of giving consumers what they want instead of making ridiculous claims about how “radical” the most conservative “animal rights” organization in the United States is. Businesses know that making these changes is viewed as positive by consumers, and they wouldn’t risk profits to make these changes. The Farm Bureau would do a better service to their members if they were paying attention to what consumers want instead of fighting change.

MRSA scares the bejeezus out of me

Friday, February 5th, 2010

A giant petri dish

MRSA is an antibiotic-resistant staph infection (a flesh-eating disease) that has been linked to both hospitals and farms.

What do farms and hospitals have in common? They collect a great number of sick or at-risk individuals together in one place, combined with lots and lots of antibiotics. Giving lots of antibiotics leads to the mutation of diseases into forms that are resistant to antibiotics, which could possibly mean that diseases will pop up that are potentially untreatable, or at least extremely difficult to treat.

Health Canada states that “Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an emerging global health issue that, if not addressed, may evolve into one of the most significant public health challenges worldwide.”

I’ve written about MRSA before, but I just read about a new pair of reports that have come out with links between animals and humans and the spread of MRSA. One of the reports is about 3 patients in Spain who have been identified as having that country’s first cases of humans contracting “pig MRSA” (ST398):

The researchers spotted these particular isolates (out of 44 analyzed at the two hospitals in 2006) because they were resistant to tetracycline. Tetracycline resistance is not common among community strains of MRSA, because the drug isn’t the first-line choice for skin and soft-tissue infections; and when it is given, it’s usually for a short course, so the drug does not exert much selection pressure on the bug. But tetracycline is a very common animal antibiotic, and tetracycline resistance is a hallmark of ST398; it is one of the factors that led the Dutch researchers who first identified the strain to take a second look at the bug.

Tetracycline (and related antibiotics) are approved for use in Canadian livestock.

The other report is about an Italian man who contracted a similar flesh-eating disease called “Necrotizing fasciitis”:

Necrotizing fasciitis is a terrible disease: If doctors don’t respond very quickly, it can kill, while the emergency surgery that forestalls death often carves away large areas of flesh or sacrifices entire limbs. This patient was fortunate: He was in the hospital for 31 days, but recovered and went home.

The researchers conclude that “because our patient did not have any other potential risk factor, dairy cows were probably the source of the human infection.”

MRSA doesn’t get a lot of press, but it worries me that it is caused by excessive antibiotic use – and this particular “pig MRSA” is caused by antibiotic use in animals. Farmers are rightly worried that if they don’t give antibiotics to their animals then they will get sick and die prematurely. This is because they keep them in such unhealthy conditions, in confinement, packed in by the thousands into small spaces – conditions that no animal, human or not, could survive in for very long without contracting diseases.

If we want to ensure that the medicines that we’ve developed to fight diseases continue to work, we need to restrict their use as much as possible. Using them to enable animal agriculture, which the world could well do without, is completely irresponsible. This isn’t a case of treating one sick animal every now and then, when they are sick. This is actually a case of creating environments for disease and using antibiotics and other medications to improve weight gain, keep the animals alive long enough to slaughter them, and above all to increase profits.

Anyone who cares about our medical system and the health of everyone on this planet, human or animal, should really be opposed to this use of medications in animals. It’s threatening us all.

In the next few days there will be a report on CBS news about antibiotic use in animal agriculture which should be worth watching. The meat, egg, and dairy industries are vehemently opposed to any restrictions on the use of medications in animals, once again putting the general public at risk.

The meat industry doesn’t care about you or the animals

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Pigs waiting to be auctioned

The more I learn about the industries that exploit animals to be used for food, the more I realize that there is simply no concern for the animals or even for the humans who consume the meat of those animals.

Erik Marcus linked me to an article Martha Rosenberg has just written about the drug ractopamine, which is used in pigs and cattle as they near slaughter to increase weight gain. Ractopamine was originally developed as an asthma medication, and there is no period of time when the animals are taken off of the drug before slaughter.

While researchers and scientists investigate the cause of our diabetes, obesity, asthma and ADHD epidemics, they should ask why the FDA approved a livestock drug banned in 160 nations and responsible for hyperactivity, muscle breakdown and 10 percent mortality in pigs, according to angry farmers who phoned the manufacturer.

The beta agonist ractopamine, a repartitioning agent that increases protein synthesis, was recruited for livestock use when researchers found the drug, used in asthma, made mice more muscular says Beef magazine.

But unlike the growth promoting antibiotics and hormones used in livestock which are withdrawn as the animal nears slaughter, ractopamine is started as the animal nears slaughter. (Source)

And this isn’t just a mild antibiotic. In fact, people are warned to wear gloves and masks if they might come in contact with it:

How does a drug marked, “Not for use in humans. Individuals with cardiovascular disease should exercise special caution to avoid exposure. Use protective clothing, impervious gloves, protective eye wear, and a NIOSH-approved dust mask” become “safe” in human food? With no washout period? (Source)

In the US, ractopamine is approved for use in pigs, cattle, and turkeys. But wait, you say, we wouldn’t allow a drug like this to be used in Canada! Sorry to disappoint, but Canada is on the same pharmaceutical train as the US, and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has approved ractopamine use in pigs and cattle.

Roctopamine is known to cause increased stress in animals and increases the likelihood that animals will arrive as downers at the slaughterhouse. But, even if the death rate increases, the weight gains from the use of ractopamine are great enough that it’s a net benefit to the farmer.

But at a cost of increased suffering for all of the animals, not to mention increased human health risk. Since the drug is given to animals up to the point of being shipped off to slaughter, who knows how much ends up getting washed into groundwater or how much remains in the meat when it is sold?

What’s striking to me is that China and Taiwan have banned the use of ractopamine because of its health risks. They won’t even allow meat into the country that contains traces of the drug. in 2007 a shipment of pig meat from a slaughterhouse in Canada was found to contain ractopamine, and they banned all imports of meat from that slaughterhouse. When China and Taiwan, both countries that have slightly questionable records when it comes to human safety, prohibit the use of a drug because of its health risks, there must be something to it.

And how can you know if the meat you eat has ractopamine in it? Any conventionally raised pigs or cattle may be fed ractopamine. There is no requirement that the farm disclose the use of this drug. It certainly doesn’t make it onto any packaging. How then can anyone make an informed decisions about what (or who) they are eating?

Quite frankly, no matter how carefully we watch the animal exploitation industries (meat, eggs, and dairy included) they are focused on maximizing profit. And the interests of animals and consumers alike are just obstacles to overcome in pursuit of that profit.

Animal Rights and Art

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Click the painting to see more of Katana's art.

Local Vancouver artist, Katana Barnett, has interviewed me at her fascinating art blog, Katanaville.  The topic?  Animal rights and art.   Be sure to check it out!