Minnesota Valley Humane Society disbands

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

 

BURNSVILLE–The Minnesota Valley Humane Society, founded in
1981, is to close and disband at the end of 2010, board chair Cathy
McCoy announced in a December 2, 2010 news release. The society
claimed 450 volunteers and to have rehomed more than 50,000 animals,
including 1,927 in 2009.
Despite raising more than $1 million in 2008, the Minnesota
Valley Humane Society lost nearly $200,000. In 2009, reported the
Minneapolis Star Tribune, “The society sold its Burnsville building,
which it said was too small,” and agreed to pay $925,000 for a new
location in Eagan, planning to spend $1 million more on renovations.
Instead, rising costs and falling income caused the society
to quit doing animal sterilizations in October 2009, and to close to
the public on Mondays and Tuesdays.
Remaining funds will be “used to settle the organization’s
remaining financial obligations and assist with contingency plans for
employees and transitions for shelter animals,” said McCoy.

New Mexico wild horse & chimp refuge plans falter

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

 

ALBUQUERQUE–New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson scrambled as his
term ended to save his September 2010 initiatives to create
sanctuaries for wild horses and chimpanzees.
Richardson on September 17, 2010 announced a plan to use
$2.9 million in federal economic stimulus money to add the former
Ortiz Mountain Ranch to Cerrillos Hills State Park, 20 miles south
of Santa Fe, turning it into the largest wild horse sanctuary in the
world.

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Smaller Japanese fleet & bigger Sea Shepherd fleet sail toward Whale Wars IV

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

 

TOKYO, HOBART–The Jap-anese whaling fleet sailed on
December 2, 2010 to kill whales in Antarctic waters declared off
limits by the International Whaling Commission since 2004. The Sea
Shepherd Conservation Society fleet sailed the same day for a seventh
winter of trying to stop the whalers, and a fourth winter of hosting
the Animal Planet crew that produces the documentary hit series Whale
Wars.

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Birders push shooting feral cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

WASHINGTON D.C.–The American Bird
Conservancy did not come right out and say on
December 1, 2010 that it favors shooting and
lethally trapping feral cats. But ABC did issue
a media release steering reporters to a newly
published University of Nebraska at Lincoln
extension service report that made those
suggestions.
The release quoted ABC vice present for
conservation advocacy Darin Schroeder stating,
“The report validates everything American Bird
Conservancy has been saying about the feral cat
issue for many years.”‘

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Coffee fad revives civet farming

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

DENPASAR, HANOI–Just seven years after
China banned civet farming because of the
association of civet consumption with more than
800 human deaths from Sudden Acute Respiratory
Syndrome, a vogue for pricy civet coffee has
brought the industry back perhaps bigger than
ever–and certainly in many more places.
Sold to coffee snobs as kopi luwak, the
Indonesian word for it, civet coffee is brewed
from the beans that civets excrete after eating
coffee berries, one of their favorite foods.
Civet coffee is by reputation stronger and
usually more aromatic than most coffees.

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Editorial: The renewed potential of online petitions

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

ANIMAL PEOPLE has never circulated a petition, online or
otherwise. Yet one of our frequent functions in recent years is
helping to inform and inspire online petition drives–and,
sometimes, to point out that a petition may do more harm than good.
The popularity of petitions as a protest tactic perhaps began
with the success of English nobility in obliging King John to assent
to the Magna Carta at Runnymede in June 1215. The Declaration of
Independence, addressed by American colonists to King George III,
reinforced the lesson on July 4, 1776. Subsequent petitioners have
often lost sight of the two elements that made these petitions
memorably effective. The first was that in either case the signers
were influential constituents of the king whom they sought to
persuade. The second was that their actions had consequence. When
John Hancock stepped forward to become first to sign the Declaration
of Independence, his action had moral force because he put more than
just his name on the line. This is what inspired others to add their
signatures to his and then tax themselves heavily to back their words
with the effort to introduce a new regime.

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Letters [Nov-Dec 2010]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

CO2 isn’t humane

My letter is a response to “Controlled
atmosphere stunning moves ahead,” October 2010.
I disagree with the view set forth in
this article by the proponents of carbon dioxide
gassing that CO2 is a humane method of killing
chickens. It is most likely less cruel than the
conventional method of dragging conscious birds
through electrically-charged saltwater to
paralyze their muscles in order to facilitate
feather removal after they are dead, and to
immobilize the birds on the slaughter line, but
anything is likely to be better than being
riddled with electric shocks.
Evidence shows that birds, like mammals,
have chemical receptors in their lungs that are
acutely sensitive to CO2, with the result that
subjection to this toxic gas induces pain,
panic, suffocation and breathlessness (dyspnea)
in those who inhale it.
By contrast, chickens and other birds do
not have the chemical receptors in their lungs to
detect inert gases such as argon and nitrogen,
which is why animal welfare proponents,
including scientists like Dr. Mohan Raj, have
fought for decades to get poultry slaughter
plants to switch from electrical “stunning” to
the stun/kill method of inducing permanent
unconsciousness in poultry by means of
nitrogen/argon.
Behavioral evidence supports the
biological evidence. Whereas chickens subjected
to CO2 show clear signs of distress, shaking
their heads and stretching their necks to
breathe, chickens in the presence of argon or
nitrogen exhibit no comparable signs of suffering.
Poultry companies sincerely wishing to
reduce the suffering of their birds to a minimum
should bypass CO2 and invest in inert gas
systems. Then their proposed “humane” labels
will have at least a semblance of truth.
–Karen Davis, PhD.
President
United Poultry Concerns
12325 Seaside Road
P.O. Box 150
Machipongo, VA 23405
Phone: 757-678-7875
<Karen@upc-online.org>
<www.upc-online.org>

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Culturally Rationalized Forms of Chicken Sacrifice: The Kaporos Ritual & the Chicken Project

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:

by Karen Davis, Ph.D., president & founder, United Poultry Concerns

The idea that some groups were put on the
earth to suffer and die sacrificially for a
superior group or ideal goes far back in time.
This idea is deeply embedded in human cultures,
including the culture of the West, which is
rooted in ancient Greek and Hebrew modes of
thought, incorporated into Christianity, where
these roots combine.

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Tamira Thayne Protest

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November/December 2010:
Dogs Deserve Better founder Tamira Thayne from August 2 until
October 14, 2010 spent 10 hours each working day, 52 days in all,
chained to the steps of the Pennsylvania state capitol in Harrisburg
to promote an anti-chaining bill, which died when the legislative
session ended.
California, Connecticut, Nevada, and Texas already limit
the length of time that dogs can be left chained, along with
hundreds of municipalities. Prolonged chaining is believed to make
dogs more territorial and therefore more dangerous.
About a third of fatal dog attacks on children are by chained
dogs. Brianna Nicole Shanor, 8, whose photo is on Thayne’s
doghouse, was killed by a chained Rottweiler in Hanover,
Pennsylvania, on January 19, 2009.

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