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This page is a archive of entries in the Beyond Belief category from May 2008.

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Beyond Belief: May 2008: Monthly Archives

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Number of animals killed in the world by the meat, dairy and egg industries since you opened this webpage, not including the billions of marine animals killed annually.

Beyond Belief: May 2008 Archives

More examples of animal cruelty.

 

The cats and dogs were raised for chinese meat, pet food, and even your shoes and belts. (40% of leather comes from dog/cat skin). 

Some of the animals (pigs cows chickens ducks and geese) were raised for meat, dairy, eggs, and fois gras. Some were raised for KFC produce. Some of the footage was taken from free-range egg companies that had the 'animal care certified' mark on. 
 
The animals in the testing labs were from Iams, and other P&G companies. The tiger and lions were being kept in a poor, unhygenic sanctuary.


It is difficult to watch because you intuitively know that this is wrong. Act on your intuition; do not deny its validity because you prefer chickens over pasta. 

What moral person would allow this to continue unchallenged. Going vegan is a form of direct protest, an explicit statement that you will no longer condone this with your dollars. 

Allow me to modify Pascal's Wager: If those who advocate for the philosophy of animal rights are wrong, the worst possible result is the end of the behavior witnessed in the video (less suffering!) and a change in your dietary habits; if we are correct, then our culture, your "lifestyle," is markedly immoral or intrinsically bad. Which potential result is worse?       

Way to 'marr' my race viewing pleasure.

"The race was marred by the death of runner-up Eight Belles, who collapsed after the wire after fracturing both front ankles. The brave and massive gray filly, trained by Larry Jones and owned by Fox Hill Farms, was euthanized almost immediately on track."

From the synopsis on this year's 124th Kentucky Derby. 

This 'brave' filly was asked to put thousands of pounds of pressure per stride on her delicate, half-formed leg bones. Years of 'selective breeding' have created a Thoroughbred horse who is faster - but who is so delicate that track injuries are steadily increasing. When 800+ plus horses die on tracks every year, it makes you wonder, what number will be great enough that we'll move horse racing into the category of abuse currently occupied by dog and bird fighting. Add to that 800 the thousands of horses who are seriously injured and killed later, or who do not perform and either end up as meat or breeding machines. Once again, it's not okay for me to break a horse's legs at home, even if someone paid me a million dollars. But in a competition? Sure, that's fine. Yes, the odds of it happening aren't huge, but the odds are significantly greater than if Belles was home, hanging out, doing what horses are meant to do. Which isn't to run 35mph for a mile and a half with a 105lb human on their backs. Or to jump a 5 foot fence with a 120lb human on their backs. 

I see a great beauty in a horse speeding down the track. Despite everything I know, my heart soars when I'm watching them fly down the backstretch. But I see equal beauty in a horse playing by himself in a field. I can see no beauty in a three year old with her whole life ahead of her snapping both her ankles. I see nothing but a grizzly spectacle reminiscent of the the gladiators of Rome. 

Please, stop saying that Eight Belles didn't deserve this and start saying that no one, no horse, no animal, deserves this, and thus no human should put them in a position where it can happen. This isn't a tragic accident. It's "a risk we're willing to take", gambling with another life. I can't help but remember three years ago when Barbaro shattered his leg in the Preakness Stakes. Thousands of people were crushed and saddened, but did anything change?  Can things change? Yes, absolutely. It's up to us to make sure they do. 

I think the end of this article sums it up nicely; although she did what very few fillies has ever done, raced the Derby, killed herself for human pleasure, is dead...

"Still, Eight Belles was a sentimental pick by 157,770 fans, second-largest crowd in Derby history. She repaid their support by returning $10.60 and $6.40 for a $2 win ticket."

At the last, we rate her by her monetary value. 

belles2.jpgYou can read more about this insanity here