Can a label make pork “humane”?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2009:
LONDON–Two pork industry fronts, the
British Pig Executive and the National Pig
Association, may not advertise that “British pig
farms have very high welfare standards, assured
by the Quality Standard Mark,” the Advertising
Standards Authority ruled on February 11, 2009.
Pending revision of the BPEx and NPA ads,
the ruling interrupted a two-year promotion
featuring television chef Jamie Oliver. The
Advertising Standards Authority passed no
judgement as to the value of the Quality Standard
Mark used by BPEx and the NPA, but only about a
third of the pigs raised in Britain are raised
according to the requirements of the program.

Read more

No more treating sentient lives as trash

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2009:

Horse racing evolved as “The Sport of Kings,” since kings
were among the first people who could afford to breed and race highly
valued animals kept by others mostly for work.
Animal fighting, regardless of any terms applied to the
human participants, by contrast evolved as “The Sport of Trash.”
The plastic garbage bags full of “sexed” male chickens
awaiting live maceration at any hatchery serving the egg industry
illustrate why. Cockfighting, bullfighting, and dogfighting each
originated through the quest to find profitable uses for lives that
would otherwise be snuffed out and discarded: birds who would never
lay eggs, cattle who would never give milk, and barge-born mongrel
pups who might combine big-dog stamina with small-dog feistiness,
but would grow up to be too small to pull carts, too big to hunt rats.
Gambling money and the evolution of paying audiences for
animal fighting eventually separated the lineage of most gamecocks,
fighting bulls, and fighting dogs from their barnyard and waterfront
ancestors, but not entirely. The public participatory forms of
bullfighting practiced in India as jallikattu and dhirio, for
example, and the Brazilian version called farra du boi, are little
changed from ancient origins.
Surplus bull calves in early agrarian societies might be
castrated and trained to draw plows and carts, but relatively few
were needed for work. Bull calves might also be raised as steers,
for beef; but until the advent of mechanized grain production, few
people could afford to keep and fatten cattle just to be eaten.
Yet many tried. Around the world, agrarian societies
typically tried to feed most of their young and healthy animals
through the winter, then culled them at midwinter solstice and
spring equinox festivals. The killing was sometimes ritualized as
sacrifice, sometimes as sport and entertainment, and often as all
three.

Read more

Hell & high water hit Down Under

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2009:
MELBOURNE–Dozens of fast-spreading bushfires, many of them
believed to have been set by arsonists, killed countless animals
and hundreds of humans who tried to save their homes and animals in
drought-stricken northeastern Victoria state, Australia during the
first weekend of February 2009.
Among the first 181 known human fatalities were five
prominent animal advocates and two young sisters who tried
unsuccessfully to evacuate their horses [see page 18]. More than 200
rural Australians were missing in a burned region larger than
Luxembourg, pending searches of rubble that remained smouldering for
as long as a week.

Read more

Obituaries [Jan/Feb 2009]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:
Phyllis Jean Stoner Clifton, 79, mother of ANIMAL PEOPLE
editor Merritt Clifton, died on December 19, 2008 at home in
Bellingham, Washington. Becoming a vegetarian in 1949, upon
marriage to Jack Clifton, who survives her, she remained
vegetarian during long hospitalizations in the 1950s and 1960s, when
hospitals rarely accommodated vegetarian patients. A schoolteacher
in parts of four decades, she reviewed 29 biographies, novels, and
books about cats for ANIMAL PEOPLE, 1992-1997, and contributed to
many other periodicals until the onset of her terminal illness
inhibited her ability to write.

Read more

Animal obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:

Lelani, 13, a German shepherd adopted from an animal
shelter who became foster mother to the orphaned bear cubs
rehabilitated by Idaho Black Bear Rehab in Garden City, Idaho, died
on December 28, 2008. “Until LeLani,” recalled Idaho Black Bear
Rehab founder Sally Maughn, “single cubs would bawl and pace when
they were left alone in our outdoor enclosures. I couldn’t be with
them all the time, so LeLani was a blessing to both the cubs and me.
Now comes the decision of trying to get another ‘bear dog’ or not,
and will I ever find one as good with the cubs as LeLani was.”

Read more

“First dog” may be last Obama pick

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:
WASHINGTON D.C.–The identity of the new First Dog remained
unknown as the January/February 2009 edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE went to
press, a week before the inauguration of incoming U.S. President
Barack Obama–but the Obama family leans toward either a Portuguese
water dog or a Labradoodle, Obama told the ABC News show This Week
With George Stephanopoulous on January 11, 2009.
Portuguese water dogs, usually pedigreed, are rarely seen
in shelters. Labradoodles are a “designer hybrid” of Labrador
retriever with poodle, not recognized by the American Kennel Club as
a breed, but now commonly produced by commercial breeders, often
found in raids on alleged puppy mills, and widely available from
shelters and rescue groups.

Read more

Trying to help animals in Gaza

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:
GAZA–Networking with animal rescuers near Gaza, in both
Palestine and Israel, collecting money for animal relief in the
combat zones, ANIMAL PEOPLE president Kim Bartlett helped to start a
rescue effort less than 10 days after the shooting began on December
27, 2008–long before there was any clear sign of when the fighting
might end, despite rumors that Israel would pull back troops from
Gaza before the January 20, 2009 inauguration of new U.S. President
Barack Obama.
“We are now working with the Israeli charity Let The Animals
Live to help us get medicine and supplies into Gaza,” reported
Palestine Wildlife Society executive director Imad Atrash. “There
some of our friends with the ministry of agriculture, the veterinary
department, and with other nonprofit organizations will help us,”
Atrash hoped.

Read more

Colorado Humane Society in receivership

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:
DENVER–The Colorado Humane Society, operating since 1881,
was on Decemeber 16, 2008 placed in receivership.
“The motion, filed by Colorado Attorney General John Suthers
in Arapahoe County Court, immediately removes executive director
Mary C. Warren, her husband Robert Warren,” who was development
director, “and Mary Warren’s daughter, Stephenie L. Gardner,” who
was director of operations, “and bars them from any control of the
charity’s assets,” reported Howard Pankratz of the Denver Post.

Read more

BOOKS: The Atlas of Endangered Species

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:

The Atlas of Endangered Species
Revised and Updated
by Richard Mackay
University of California Press
(2120 Berkeley Way, Berkeley, CA 94704-1012), 2009. 128 pages,
paperback, illustrated. $19.95.

If the entire content of The Atlas of
Endangered Species were to be redrawn into a
single huge map, the central portion would be a
succinct summary of current knowledge about
endangered species issues.
In the foreground, however, and in
several other prominent regions, unwary readers
might be warned “Here be flying bulls,” never
seen but known from bull feathers.
The back cover, for instance, warns
that “20% of the Earth’s species” are “facing
extinction by 2030,” a scant 21 years from now.
Atlas of Endangered Species author Richard Mackay
is far from the first to make that claim, but
Mackay provides an unwitting demonstration of how
it might happen, strictly through exercises in
modeling.

Read more

1 79 80 81 82 83 648