Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts

WE'VE MOVED

Animal Rescue Online has moved to Animalrescueonline.org!

A Book For Your To-Read List; and, Should the World Go Vegan?

Authors Temple Grandin and Catherine Johnson discuss how "we can treat animals better if we consider the emotions that motivate them" in their new book Animals Make Us Human. The book argues, among other things, for more humane treatment of animals in slaughterhouses.

I have not read the book yet, but I did want to address something a reviewer on Amazon.com said. According to this person the book is merely "Glorified Hypocracy" because while "Grandin's 'systems' may improve the overall slaughtering process for the companies that hire her expertise [...] there is [still] no rational 'reason' to continue to do such. In fact, given all the information known to us - eating meat is one of the most illogical, self-destructive (and cruel) things one can do... Go Vegan."

As a vegetarian-in-training myself (I'm new to the lifestyle), I understand the point being made. However, I disagree with it. Grandin's book is a step forward. Someday perhaps, meat eating will be replaced by plant and synthetic food options - but until then, people are going to eat meat. I have several meat eaters in my house: there's no way they're going vegetarian, let alone vegan. Right now, it'd be near impossible to shut down slaughterhouses - people love their burgers and fries, their steaks. Therefore, the least we can do is find an approach that is more humane.

What do you think? Can (and should) we obliterate meat eating? Should the whole world go vegan and/or vegetarian?

Greyhound Racing

After posting about Bubba yesterday, I decided I wanted to learn a bit more about the greyhound racing industry. I was not pleased. Racing greyhounds are horribly misused - and that's only as long as their owners deem them worth keeping. When the dogs stop winning races and making money, often times they're put to death. In addition, many owners breed dozens of puppies in order to create a champion. The dogs that aren't considered good racing investments are also euthanized. "An estimated 5,000 dogs were killed in 2003," reports Grey2K USA, a United States greyhound advocacy group.

In 1996, Idaho Governor Phil Batt stated, "Greyhound racing depends upon selecting a few highly competitive dogs out of a large group. It hardly seems worth it to me to go through that process of breeding and killing the ones that can't compete, just to have the sport."

While many states no longer permit greyhound racing; and, Massachusetts even banned it based on popular vote - ten states still permit it. (To read more about Massachusetts's racing ban: Behind the Tracks of Greyhound Racing and a win in 2008 for Massachusetts.)

Racing greyhounds are horribly mistreated. They're kept hours a day in kennels far too small for them; in many cases there's no room for them to stand or lie down. As well, they're fed low-grade meat, because it's cheaper, and transported between tracks in awful, hot, cramped trucks.

It's an awful industry. Please keep informed of voting in your area to ban racing, and do all you can to help. Check out Grey2K USA's website for more information.

Happy Birthday, Abraham Lincoln!

Written by Ellen Jackson, author of Abe Lincoln Loved Animals.

On February 12, 2009, the nation will celebrate Abraham Lincoln's 200th birthday.

We all know that Abe Lincoln was one of our greatest presidents, a man who was born in a log cabin and led our nation in its darkest hour. But, here’s something you may not know. Abraham Lincoln loved animals–all kinds of animals–and he rescued quite a few during his lifetime.

When he was a child, Abe talked to his classmates and told them that cruelty to animals was wrong. Once as a young man, he waded across a treacherous stream to rescue a dog. The ice on the water cut his legs and the footing was unsure. But even though everyone tried to stop him, Abe knew he had to rescue the scared animal.

This behavior may not seem unusual to you, but kindness to animals wasn’t considered important in the nineteenth century. The people Abraham Lincoln grew up with were hardy frontiersmen and no-nonsense farmers. Animals were raised for food. They were trained to hunt or work in the fields. If they were old, useless, or sick, they were discarded.

But Abe Lincoln was different. He was a humanitarian--a man who loved children and animals and whose heart ached for anyone who was suffering.

Abraham Lincoln never cared for fancy clothes. But when he was elected to the Illinois General Assembly, he bought his first good suit. The suit cost him sixty dollars–an amount which would probably be several hundred dollars in today’s currency.

One day, when Abe was out riding in the country, wearing his good suit, he saw a young pig stuck in a mudhole. Abraham knew he would ruin his suit if he got down in the mud and pulled the pig out. He tried not to look at the animal as he rode by. But the poor creature’s eyes seemed to say, “There, now! My last hope is gone.”

Abraham couldn’t stand that look in the pig’s eyes. He went back, got down into the mud in his good clothes, and worked until he’d freed the pig.

When Abraham Lincoln got married and had a family, the house was often filled with animals: cats, dogs, and even pet rats. A big, floppy-eared mutt named Fido came to live with the Lincolns. And Abe was always bringing stray kittens home to his children. His wife once said that cats and kittens were his “hobby.”

Abraham Lincoln’s concern for animals didn’t end when he became President. On one occasion, the President and his Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, rescued some peacocks. Ropes had been tied to the birds’ feet to keep them from flying off, and these had become entangled in the trees where the peacocks were roosting. Lincoln and Stanton unwound all the ropes so the peacocks could fly down in the morning.

There were many animals in Lincoln’s White House. At various times the family had a dog name Jip, at least one cat, a pair of goats, a horse, two ponies, a turkey named Jack, and some rabbits. In spite of the dreadful problems the country faced, Abraham Lincoln had room in his heart for all the living creatures that shared the White House with him.

On Abraham Lincoln’s birthday, February 12, remember our remarkable 16th President and his respect and love for animals.

If you’d like to know more about Abe Lincoln’s many relationships with animals, read Abe Lincoln Loved Animals by Ellen Jackson, illustrated by Doris Ettlinger and published by Albert Whitman.