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- JP's right, of course. Mink don't hibernate. The farmers quoted don't live
- in northern Canada, either. They live in the southernmost tip of the
- country, just north of the line of latitude that defines northern California.
- Assuming they know where they live they possibly do know that mink don't
- hibernate, but that some of mink's prey does, in the northern part of the
- species' range...in other words, this seems to smack of another example of
- how badly reporters screw up their reports. (If you've ever dicussed
- ANYTHING with print media and seen the results in the next day's paper,
- you'll know what I mean). But even if a single quoted mink farmer reallly
- was that stupid (and this whole episode seems to have been marked by
- monumental stupidity) it does not negate EVERYTHING else ALL or ANY of them
- are quoted as saying. It's not that I'm giving the mink farmers the benefit
- of the doubt out of any resect for thier horrid profession, it's just that I
- rather think they'd have noticed that mink don't hibernate...the entire
- breeding cycle being dependent upon and wrapped up in the fact that they
- don't.
-
- Cheers,
-
- Barry.
-
- In a message dated 97-04-01 10:20:31 EST, MINKLIB@aol.com writes:
-
- << Subj:Mink Farmers Factual Error
- Date:97-04-01 10:20:31 EST
- From:MINKLIB@aol.com
- Sender:owner-ar-news@envirolink.org
- Reply-to:MINKLIB@aol.com
- To:ar-news@envirolink.org
-
- Just to clarify something, the mink farmer quoted in the newspaper article
- Alan posted exemplified how little fur farmers actually know about mink.
- Mink DO NOT hibernate as this individual claimed. Therefore, I think we
- can
- take much of there other claims with a grain of salt as well, considering
- how
- little these people actually know.
-
- JP Goodwin
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade
-
-
- Date: Sat, 05 Apr 1997 02:06:54 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Navy Dedicates Island As Refuge
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970405020651.006be0cc@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------------
- 04/03/1997 18:32 EST
-
- Navy Dedicates Island As Refuge
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Navy and the Fish and Wildlife Service are
- dedicating the
- island of Midway as a national wildlife refuge.
-
- Situated about 1,250 miles northwest of Honolulu, the island is best known
- as the
- site of the Battle of Midway during World War II.
-
- Now, millions of migratory birds come to the atoll to nest.
-
- Under Navy jurisdiction since 1903, the island now will be under the Fish and
- Wildlife Service and will be open to the public for the first time in 50
- years, the
- Pentagon said Thursday.
- Date: Fri, 04 Apr 1997 18:50:49 -0400
- >From: lentils@anarchy.wn.pl.net (Wgtn Animal Action)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: phil@ch.planet.gen.nz, safe@chch.planet.co.nz
- Subject: (NZ) US Flag burning in support of Tony Wong
- Message-ID: <AD101@anarchy.wn.pl.net>
-
-
-
-
- United States flag burned outside Embassy by Animal Liberation group
-
- Friday 4th April 1997
-
- A local Animal Liberation group torched a United States Flag at the
- American Embassy at 5pm today in support of a teenage activist
- currently on hunger strike in an American jail.. Wellington Animal
- Action says it burnt the flag as a protest against the inhumane and
- brutal treatment of a sixteen year old Tony Wong of Indiana, USA
-
- Wong began his 40th day of a hunger strike today, the longest hunger strike in recent
- memory in U.S. social justice causes. He also began his fifth day of being force-fed by
- personnel at the juvenile prison were he is being held. Wong says the feeding is causing
- more pain, and more blood, to pour out of his nose, and says the prison refuses to stop the
- feeding or treat him.
-
- Wong will not eat until the Clinton Administration agrees to support federal legislation
- banning the barbaric leghold trap, and end opposition to the European Union wild fur ban,
- which would stop the importation to EU countries of fur from nations not yet banning the
- trap. The U.S. has not banned the trap and is threatening to sue the EU. The third demand
- asks New York to kill a measure that would legalize a "snare trap" for beavers.
-
- Mark Eden from Wellington Animal Action says the burning of the flag
- by the activists is only part of the growing international support
- for Wong, jailed Feb. 24 for at least 2 months at the Plainfield
- Indiana Boys' School for protesting against animal cruelty at a fur
- store last November 29th.
-
- Mr Eden says "We are demanding Wong's immediate release, and an end to the unethical
- and unnecessary force-feeding by the prison authorities".
-
- For more info contact - Mark Eden
- Ph (64)-4-3856728
-
-
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
- Wellington Animal Action
- PO Box 6387, Te Aro
- Wellington
- Aotearoa/New Zealand
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
-
-
-
-
-
- On March 11th a fur farm breeders co-op building in Utah was totally destroyed in an
- arson attack claimed by animal liberationists acting in support of Tony Wong. Over a
- million dollars of damage was caused in the attack. The Animal Liberation Front has
- firebombed a fur store in New York and an animal research laboratory in California over
- the last few weeks in solidarity with Tony Wong and other animal rights prisoners hunger
- striking in the United States. Animal rights activists from all over North America will
- protest in Indiana this weekend in an effort to force the authorities to free Tony Wong.
-
- International contacts
- Activist Civil Liberties Committee USA (916) 452-7179
- Campaign Against the Fur Trade USA (214) 5031419
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 15:41:04 +0800 (SST)
- >From: vadivu <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) The real costs of meat
- Message-ID: <199704040741.PAA31509@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard, 3 APR 97
- Letters to the Editor
- Time to delete meat
-
- I REFER to the article ``New abattoir to be environment friendly''
- ("Hong Kong Standard", 26 March).
-
- In the first place an abattoir cannot possible be environmentally
- friendly _ whatever the cost of mitigation measures.
-
- And it is certainly not going to be animal-friendly nor, at $1.9
- billion, taxpayer friendly. And what about the cost and health hazards
- of disposing of the nine tonnes of animal carcasses that are generated
- each day, according to current Hong Kong Government figures?
-
- And what about the disease hazards created by putting so many animals
- and carcasses in one place?
-
- "E-coli" and foot and mouth disease are topical at the moment but
- they are only two of a whole variety of infections that can easily
- break out in centralised facilities and spread like wildfire.
-
- And what about the cost of treating the afflictions that result from a
- meat-based diet: for example, heart disease, strokes and bowel cancer?
-
- The least we can do is to cut down on eating meat for the sake of our
- health, the animals and the environment.
-
- Every child has the right to a healthy diet _ that means no meat.
-
- Dr John Wedderburn, Hong Kong (via e-mail)
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 15:50:11 +0800 (SST)
- >From: vadivu <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (SG) S'pore film raises talk
- Message-ID: <199704040750.PAA31916@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times, 2 April 97
- S'pore film raises talk
-
- One of the home-made features to debut at the 10th Singapore International
- film festival this week is God or Dog, directed by Singaporean Hugo Ng.
-
- The movie is about a jobless man named Arthur Sin who assumes the
- personality of a spiritual medium. It is based on the real-life murders of
- two young children by Adrian Lim in 1981.
-
- The film is already being talked about by festival-goers because of its
- violence and graphic sex scenes.
-
- There is one scene where Sin (played by Ng) killes a poodle brutally by
- twisting its neck.
-
- A press release with film anecdotes states that the dog was put to sleep
- temporarily and "subjected to our manipulation".
-
- The dog did wake up in the end, but it died a few months ago, the release said.
-
- And it will not be the only cast member missing the film's premiere this
- Sunday. According to Shin Min Daily News, actress Tay Teow Li, 25, who plays
- Sin's second wife, died in her sleep three weeks after shooting wrapped up.
- The cause of death is not known.
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 17:53:14 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [Aust] 3rd death linked to Salmonella poisoning
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970404175008.24dfd6e0@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The Melbourne Age reports (29.3.1997) in an article titled
- "Third death heightens food fears" that the Victorian state coroner was
- investigating Victoria's third salmonella-linked death this year as health
- officials battle to retain public confidence in food hygiene standards.
-
- A 27 year old man who died at his Springvale home on 9 March was found to
- have the rare salmonella typhimurium 43 in his body. The cause of his death
- is not known.
-
- Six other people have fallen ill with the rare strain, including a woman who
- was admitted to hospital, in the state's third salmonella outbreak this year.
-
- Deadly Trail
- ------------
-
- Friday 21st March
-
- Two people die and 30 are ill from Salmonella muenchen poisoning after eating
- ham and corned beef products from the Largo factory in Reservoir.
-
- Tuesday 25th March
-
- Pork, ham and pate rolls from the World Hot bread bakery in Springvale
- cause an unprecedented outbreak of salmonella. By the weekend, 554 people
- with salmonella typhimurium are linked to the outbreak.
-
- Friday 28th March
-
- One young man dies and it is announced he has extremely rare Salmonella
- typhimurium 43, which has made 6 others ill. Health authorities close the Hop Ky
- Restaurant in Springvale.
-
- *Postscript :In the last two days it has been stated in the media that a
- popular liver paste and another product are now under recall from Victoria,
- Australia
- (a brand also sold in Western Australia imported from Victoria). WA health
- officials have found contamination of some type in the eastern state
- smallgoods. Further details should be available soon. An appeal for
- increased food monitoring standards has also been heard through the media
- and sales of smallgoods in Victoria's markets have declined as the public
- become wary of eating possibly contaminated processed meats.
-
- Kind Regards,
-
- Marguerite Wegner
- Western Australia
- rabbit@wantree.com.au
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Sat, 05 Apr 1997 08:03:24 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Consumer groups demand single food-safety agency
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970405080322.0068937c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN web page:
- ---------------------------------
- Consumer groups demand single food-safety agency
-
- April 3, 1997
- Web posted at: 5:40 p.m. EST
-
- In this story:
-
- * Several agencies responsible
- * FDA: Current system works
- * Related stories and sites
-
- WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The recent hepatitis scare in
- frozen strawberries has prompted renewed calls
- from consumer groups for the creation of a single
- federal food-safety agency.
-
- Consumer advocates wrote President Clinton
- Wednesday, saying the latest outbreak follows a
- year of increased food scares and signifies the
- need for a single agency to monitor food safety.
-
- "Last year, there was a bumper crop of food-borne
- illnesses from FDA-regulated foods," said Caroline
- Smith DeWaal of the Center for Science in the
- Public Interest, one of the groups demanding
- action.
-
- Among recent food scares in the U.S., according to
- DeWaal:
-
- * More than 1,000 people fell ill from eating
- parasite- tainted Guatemalan raspberries.
- * At least 100 people received E.coli poisoning
- from lettuce.
- * One child died and dozens of others fell ill
- from drinking E.coli-tainted apple juice.
- * Hundreds of people became sick after eating
- bad oysters.
-
- Although the U.S. food supply is considered the
- safest in the world, an estimated 9,000 Americans
- die every year from food poisoning. Between 9
- million and 33 million become sick every year from
- some form of food poisoning, records show.
-
- Several agencies responsible
-
- The current food-safety system spreads
- responsibility among numerous agencies, including
- the United States Department of Agriculture, the
- Food and Drug Administration and the Environmental
- Protection Agency. For example, the USDA regulates
- meat; the FDA regulates most other food.
-
- DeWaal and others contend the system
- is too inefficient, and that years of
- underfunding have left the FDA with a food safety
- program that is little more than a recall agency
- for contaminated foods.
-
- In January, Clinton asked Congress for a $43
- million food budget increase to help the agencies
- better monitor potential food hazards, among other
- things.
-
- But the consumer groups say piecemeal reforms
- aren't enough.
-
- Nancy Donley of Safe Tables Our Priority, whose
- 6-year-old son died after eating an
- E.coli-contaminated hamburger, said she "can't
- help but wonder if my only child would be alive"
- if a single agency had existed for food
- regulation.
-
- FDA: Current system works
-
- Vicki Peal, whose father died after eating a bad
- oyster, said she fears "the consequences of having
- (the FDA) oversee new food-safety threats."
-
- The FDA, meanwhile, insists that the [meat]
- various federal food agencies combined
- are up to the job.
-
- "It's best to see this as sort of an integrated
- package of many people from many perspectives with
- different skills trying to assure the public
- health," said Dr. Michael Friedman, acting
- commissioner of the FDA.
-
- Correspondent Eugenia Halsey contributed to this
- report.
- Date: Sat, 05 Apr 1997 08:46:56 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (VN) Vietnamese Spare Cats, Save Crops
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970405084654.0068e090@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ----------------------------
- 04/04/1997 04:32 EST
-
- Vietnamese Spare Cats, Save Crops
-
- HANOI, Vietnam (AP) -- Cats in northern Vietnam are off the menu and on
- the prowl.
-
- In Thai Binh province, where cats are a delicacy, authorities have banned
- felines
- from restaurant menus to preserve them for rat-hunting duty, official
- media reported
- today.
-
- Millions of ravenous rats in Thai Binh have been devouring rice crops by
- the acre.
- And farmers are turning to their dwindling cat population for help.
-
- ``So many cats have been sold for food, few are left in the villages,'' the
- state-controlled New Hanoi newspaper quoted local officials as saying.
-
- The newspaper said many cats are smuggled from Thai Binh to China where
- restaurant-owners offer higher prices for the meat.
-
- The Red River delta province of Thai Binh, about 70 miles southeast of
- Hanoi, is the
- biggest rice-producing area in northern Vietnam.
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 10:50:11 -0500 (EST)
- >From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Horse Cruelty Case
- Message-ID: <970404105010_-867446969@emout11.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- Numerous complaints of starving horses at riding stable results in
- seizure of eight emaciated horses.
-
- Second Chance Animal Sanctuary of Norman, Oklahoma, in
- conjunction with the Cleveland County Sheriff's Department, the
- District Attorney's Office, and the City of Norman Animal Control
- Department seized eight horses from the Thunderbird Riding Stables
- for animal cruelty. According to Second Chance cruelty investigator
- Jamie McAloon, "The horses were nothing but skin and bone, no fat
- tissue left, and little or no muscle left. You could count every rib,
- their backbones protruded, and each horse had rain rot and sores from
- ill-fitting harness. They literally couldn't afford to lose another
- ounce. Despite their poor condition, the horses were still being
- worked as riding horses."
-
- Owners Cindy and Bobby Steveson of Thunderbird Riding Stables
- blame the horses' poor condition on age and a bad winter. Second
- Chance has had the horses' ages estimated by two separate
- veterinarians who determined this was not the case. The horses were
- as young as 8 years old and up. Central Oklahoma has had no winter
- to speak of -- we've just had one of the mildest winters on record.
- The last excuse was that the horses had poor or few teeth and
- couldn't or wouldn't eat. Veterinarians and horse experts determined
- that the horses all had their teeth and were fully capable of eating.
- "The only thing wrong with these horses is they need food."
-
- In addition to the eight horses that were seized, investigators
- discovered seven more horses on the property in as poor a condition
- and also being ridden. The State Department of Tourism owns the
- State Park in which the stable operates, and lease the property to
- the stable. Although the Dept. has received several complaints and
- have seen the horses it is not willing to take a stand to help the
- horses. In fact the Department's statement to the media is that its
- veterinarian gave the horses a "clean bill of health."
-
- Please write to the Director and ask that the Department of
- Tourism show some compassion for these animals and insist that the
- stable owners provide adequate food and veterinary care to these
- horses, and in addition that any horses in poor health not be ridden.
-
- Letters of protest to: John Ressmeyer, Director
- Oklahoma Department of Tourism
- P.O. Box 52002
- Capitol Post Office
- Oklahoma City, OK 73152-2002
- FAX: 521-2428
-
- Letters commending the action taken for the horses' welfare to:
-
- District Attorney's Office Cleveland County Sheriff's Office
- Cleveland County 203 S. Jones
- 201 S. Jones Norman, OK 73069
- Norman, OK 73069 FAX: 366-5705
- FAX: 360-7840
-
- Chief Phil Cotton Second Chance Animal Sanct.
- 201-B W. Gray P.O. Box 1266
- Norman, OK 73069 Norman, OK 73070
- FAX: 366-5329 Email: OKPIG@juno.com
-
- Transcribed by Mary Morrison, Norman, OK.
-
- For the Animals,
- Jana, OKC
-
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 08:20:28 -0800 (PST)
- >From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: waterfowl hunting
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970404164621.2c5f49c2@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The following is from a hunting magazine. I would encourage everyone to
- write a brief comment opposing an increase in season lengths and bag limits.
- -- Mike
-
- >Duck Hunters:
- >Sound Off!
- >Here's your chance, duck and goose hunters of the West: The U.S. Fish and
- >Wildlife Service will be taking public comments until June 27 on whether to
- >modify the way it sets waterfowl hunting regulations.
- >
- >Potential changes include increases in season lengths and bag limits and
- >hunter opportunity. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know which
- >alternative anti-hunting forces are recommending, and you can bet this small,
- >but vocal crowd will weigh in with its opinions.
- >
- >The Adaptive Harvest Management Working Group has recommended an adoption of
- >moderate to liberal options as opposed to restrictive alternatives, and would
- >provide additional hunting opportunity that would maintain biological
- >soundness and reflect the desires and needs of state wildlife agencies.
- >
- >Each year the USFWS sets overall parameters for hunting seasons and bag
- >limits in each of the Pacific, Mississippi, Mountain and Eastern fly zones
- >used by migratory waterfowl. State agencies can then adopt season dates and
- >bag limits that do not exceed the federal agency's guidelines.
- >
- >The proposal for regulatory alternatives was scheduled to be included in the
- >Federal Register during mid-May, and the public comment period will end June
- >27. Comments can be sent to: Chief, Office of Migratory Bird Management, U.S.
- >Department of Wildlife Service, ms 634-ARLSQ, 1849 C. Street N.W.,
- >Washington, D.C. 20240.
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 08:37:06 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Superior camel search starts in Britain
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970404083722.20b725ec@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- The Electronic Telegraph is the on-line version of the British-based Daily
- Telegraph newspaper.
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, April 4th, 1997
-
- Search for a superior camel starts in Britain
-
- ONE of the world's leading racehorse owners has turned to experts in
- Newmarket to help produce better, faster camels for his home country.
-
- Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum, the Crown Prince of Dubai, is keen to
- encourage camel racing, a traditional sport in the Gulf region. The Sheikh,
- who owns major horse studs in Suffolk, has asked for help from the
- Newmarket-based Equine Fertility Unit.
-
- Experts, led by Dubai-based Dr Lulu Skidmore, are adapting modern breeding
- techniques - such as artificial insemination and embryo transfer - for the
- camels. Dr Skidmore spent five years in Dubai at Sheikh Mohammed's Camel
- Reproduction Centre learning about the
- animals' basic reproductive physiology.
-
- Using ultra-sound scanning, she can now pinpoint exactly when a female camel
- is ovulating and hence when it should be mated. Embryos can then be
- recovered from top camels and transferred to surrogates to help maximise the
- number of animals which the best camels can produce.
-
- The use of camels in the Gulf has been hit hard by the arrival of four-wheel
- drive vehicles. The Sheikh and others are now keen to champion their
- sporting prowess.
-
- Prof Twink Allen, of the Newmarket Equine Centre, said: "Camels are the
- national animal in the Gulf and their racing is extremely important.
- Naturally, there is a desire to get more offspring from the most competitive
- animals, that is to exploit the superior genes of the best
- stock."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 08:37:51 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [EU] GMO LABELLING LEAVES CONSUMERS IN THE DARK: GREENPEACE
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970404083807.20b74942@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From the Greenpeace Press Office
-
- GMO LABELLING LEAVES CONSUMERS IN THE DARK: GREENPEACE
-
- BRUSSELS, April 2 1997 - Labelling regulations announced by the
- European Commission today will continue to leave consumers in
- the dark about whether food products contain genetically altered
- organisms by not requiring segregation from natural grains.
-
- Greenpeace spokesperson Isabelle Mister said the Commission had
- failed to require any labelling at all for the controversial
- genetically modified soya bean and maize. Soya beans are used in
- 60 per cent of processed food products in supermarkets including
- pasta, chocolate and ice-cream.
-
- The commission also failed to require the segregation of
- genetically modified organisms (GMOs) such as soya beans and
- corn from natural grains. "Therefore these labelling regulations
- will only tell consumers a product may contain genetically
- altered organisms," she said.
-
- "The Commission through these regulations is effectively denying
- consumers the choice they are demanding : to avoid genetically
- altered food products," Meister said.
-
- The European Commission announced the adoption of a proposal for
- labelling of food products which "may contain or may consist of
- genetically modified organisms" (GMO's).
-
- Genetically altered soya beans formed less than two per cent of
- the 1996 soya bean harvest in the United States, which is the
- largest exporter into Europe, but are not segregated from the
- natural soya beans. The Commission proposal does not requrie
- segegration of US imports of soya beans nor does it require
- labelling of food products made from GMO soya beans.
-
- "Until the Commission requires the segregation of natural grains
- and organic material from the genetically altered material
- consumers will not have choice about what they eat," Meister
- said.
-
- The Commission in its announcement acknowledged that the public
- demand the full application of the precautionary principle to
- genetically modified products yet the commission has failed to
- implement this approach by approving GMO soya beans and maize
- and oil seed rape.
-
- CONTACTS: ISABELLE MEISTER mobile 31-6534 17947 or 32-2-2801400
-
- Date: Sat, 05 Apr 1997 11:44:05 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Subscription Options (Admin Note)
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970405114402.0068c9b8@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- routine posting........
-
- Here are some items of general information (found in the "welcome letter"
- sent when people subscribe--but often lose!)...included: how to post and
- how to change your subscription status (useful if you are going on
- vacation--either by "unsubscribe" or "postpone").
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- To post messages to the list, send mail to ar-news@envirolink.org
- POSTING
-
- To post a *news-related item* (no discussions), send your message to:
-
- ar-news@envirolink.org
-
- Appropriate postings to AR-News include: posting a news item, requesting
- information on some event, or responding to a request for information.
- Discussions on AR-News will NOT be allowed and we ask that any
- commentary either be taken to AR-Views or to private E-mail.
- ------------------------------------------
-
- ***General Subscription Information***
- ALL THE FOLLOWING SHOULD NOT be sent to ar-news !!!
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- Allen Schubert
- alathome@clark.net
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- allen
- ********
- "We are either part of the problem or part of the solution. Walk your talk
- and no one will be in doubt of where you stand."
- -- Howard F. Lyman
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 10:06:02 -0700
- >From: pmligotti@earthlink.net (Peter M. Ligotti)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Food Slander Laws in the USA
- Message-ID: <v01540b02af6ae52b4e58@[206.250.112.5]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- There are 13 states in the USA which currently have passed anti-free speech,
- anti-activist food slander laws:
-
- Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Michigan
- (passed just last week), Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas.
- Here is a article from the Fall 1995 issue of Earth Island Journal on the
- Food Slander laws.
-
- "Food Slander" Is Now a Crime
-
- by Gar Smith
-
- On August 17, a group of activists dumped a mixture of Diet Coke,
- NutraSweet (aspartame) and rBGH-enhanced milk (produced from cows
- injected with genetically engineered hormones) onto the pavement at
- Atlanta's Cheshire Bridge Shopping Center.
-
- The demonstration, sponsored by the Pure Foods Campaign (PFC), took its
- inspiration from the Boston Tea Party. But while dumping tea was
- considered a patriotic act in Boston Harbor, dumping soda, sweetener and
- milk is considered a crime in Georgia.
-
- "Food slander" laws, in force in Georgia and at least ten other states,
- make it a civil crime to denigrate or criticize food products without a
- "scientific basis," explained PFC coordinator Ronnie Cummings. "Industry
- lobbyists admit that these laws are probably unconstitutional... their
- real purpose is to intimidate activists and concerned consumers."
-
- Emory Law School professor David Bederman joined the PFC protest and
- explained to reporters how "food disparagement" laws were ultimately
- intended to scare not only citizens, but the media as well.
-
- In Georgia, South Dakota, Alabama, Florida, Idaho, Texas, Arizona,
- Oklahoma, Mississippi, Colorado and Louisiana it is now against the law
- to publicly criticize corporate food products under so-called "food
- disparagement" laws promoted by agriculture, chemical and biotechnology
- industry lobbyists. Similar laws are under consideration in Ohio and
- Illinois. "These laws are intended to curtail the right to free speech,
- to make it illegal to hand out leaflets or to dump rBGH milk in the
- gutter," Cummings charged.
-
- PFC claims that Food and Drug Administration Commissioner David Kessler
- "lied to Congress" when he assured legislators that bovine somatrotropin
- (BST), the genetically engineered growth hormone, was destroyed by
- pasteurization. Kessler's assurance, which spared Monsanto (BST's
- manufacturer) the expense of any further research, was based on a
- scientific paper written by Paul Groenewegen, a graduate student from
- Guelph, Canada. According to PFC, Groenewegen was "outraged" to learn
- that the FDA had misrepresented his research. Far from destroying BST,
- Groenewegen's research showed that subjecting BST to pasteurization
- temperatures 120 times normal only destroyed 19 percent of the BST in
- milk. PFC also charges that the FDA will not release research that
- "proves that lab animals got cancer from BST," despite numerous Freedom
- of Information Act requests.
-
- Monsanto's claim that BST is "identical" to natural hormones is also
- fraudulent, PFC contends, since BST replaces the naturally occurring
- amino acid lysine with epsilon-N-acetyl-lysine. While this may not sound
- significant, it is known that the alteration of a single amino acid can
- trigger sickle cell anemia or predispose some people to Alzheimer's
- disease.
-
- While rBGH is banned in Europe and Canada, and has been boycotted by 95
- percent of US dairy farmers, the FDA, Environmental Protection Agency
- and Department of Agriculture continue to license the drug (and other
- new genetically engineered foods) without pre-market safety tests.
- Thanks to industry pressure, genetically engineered foods are not
- required to carry identifying labels.
-
- "Instead of giving us affordable, healthy, natural, clean food --
- safety-tested and clearly labeled to enable consumers to exercise free
- choice -- the powers-that-be seem intent upon taking away our right to
- know what's been done to our food," Cummings stated. "Government and
- corporation hacks use 'risk assessment' and 'cost accounting' to tell us
- it's 'too expensive' to clean up food-industry practices, even as the
- Centers for Disease Control admit that 20-80 million people a year get
- food poisoning."
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- What You Can Do:
-
- PFC invites activists to stage milk-dumps around the country to call
- attention to "food slander" laws. For more information, contact: PFC,
- 860 Highway 61E, Little Marais, MN 55614; (218) 226-4146; (800)
- 451-7670.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 5 Apr 1997 00:57:46 +0800 (SST)
- >From: vadivu <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MY) Permits needed to keep exotic pets
- Message-ID: <199704041657.AAA25459@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Star (4-Apr-97)
- Permits needed to keep exotic pets
-
- JOHOR BARU: The National Park and Wildlife Department has made it compulsory
- for those wanting to keep exotic animals as pets to get a special permit.
-
- The department's public relations officer Mohd Fuad Mohd Sharif said that
- the move was necessary to prevent cruelty against such animals.
-
- Those keeping exotic pets without permits would be charged under the
- Protection of Wildlife Act 1972 which carries a fine of up to RM5,000 or
- three years' jail or both upon conviction.
-
- "We are aware that some people keep exotic birds, mammals, reptiles and
- amphibians as status symbols. Such cases are not new as we have prosecuted
- many offenders since the Act came into force in 1972," he said.
-
- Mohd Fuad said it was not easy to rear exotic animals as some owners would
- not know how to care for them.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 05 Apr 1997 12:07:00 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: pmligotti@earthlink.net, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Food Slander Laws in the USA
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970405120657.006be24c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- For additional information on the web concerning such matters, see:
-
- Rutgers Animal Rights Law Center
-
- Product Disparagement Statutes
-
- http://www.animal-law.org/pdstat/index.html
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 09:12:30 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] British hunters at bay
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970404091246.29ef8474@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Form The Province (Vancouver, BC), Thursday, April 3rd, 1997
-
- CANDIAN PRESS
-
- LONDON - Faced with a real threat that the next government in Britain might
- ban hunting to hounds, people who work in "country sports" announced the
- formation of a union yesterday to fight for their way of life.
-
- The aimof the union is not to bargain for wages but to inform the public -
- who routinely and overwhelmingly tell pollsters they oppose the hunt - what
- would happen to the rural economy if they got their wish.
- Organizers of the union warned that tens of thousands of people living in
- rural Britain directly or indirectly depend on country sports such as fox-
- and stag-hunting, hare-coursing, shooting and angling for their livelihoods.
-
- Union chairman John Fretwell said country sports generate the equivalent of
- about $14 billion Cdn a year in economic activity "and that's a lot of money
- in anybody's language."
-
- However, much of the anti-hunting sentiment resides in the Labour [P]arty,
- which appears poised to win the May 1 election and has promised to hold a
- free vote on hunting with hounds.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 09:12:32 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Dumpster-dog case brings change
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970404091248.30570018@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Province
-
- By Ian Austin
- Staff Reporter
-
- Jasper the dumpster dog has struck a blow for deprived dogs everywhere.
-
- The plucky Skye terrier's plight has led to a change in what happens to dogs
- whose owners are charged with neglect or abuse.
-
- In the past, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has had to
- apply to the B.C. Supreme Court to get custody of an animal.
-
- But B.C. Supreme Court Master Shelley Nitikman ruled yesterday that animals
- whose owners face charges will now stay with the SPCA pending the outcome of
- the court case.
-
- "The unfortunate circumstances of Japser may help other animals," Donna
- Miranda, a volunteer for [various] animal welfare [groups].
- David Wotherspoon, the SPCA's lawyer, said Jasper could barely walk, had
- heart disease, a sore on his right hind leg, a hernia and matted fur reeking
- of urine and feces after being rescued from a dumpster Jan. 20.
-
- "This application is about a dog named Jasper, a 15-year-old Skye terrier, "
- said Wotherspoon. "In the context of all the evidence, I say that he was
- abused and neglected."
-
- Bruce Ralston, lawyer for Jasper's owners, Janice and John Montroy,
- presented 50 letters of support from family, friends and teachers. "It would
- seem rather unlikely, if not preposterous, for someone to put the dog in a
- dumpster and come back and claim it four days later," Ralston said.
-
- [As I posted earlier, the SPCA contest that Jasper was abused/neglected over
- a long period of time, and the condition he was found was not caused by a
- night in the dumpster. I altered the description of about Donna Miranda from
- the original, which did not accurately describe her involvement with the
- groups.]
-
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 1997 12:24:24 -0500 (EST)
- >From: SMB5172@siena.edu
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Message-ID: <970404122424.64014502@siena.edu>
-
- ar-news mail postpone
- Date: Fri, 4 Apr 97 09:31:20 -0000
- >From: <lcanimal@ix.netcom.com>
- To: "ar-news" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (US) USDA enforcement actions
- Message-ID: <199704041723.LAA22228@dfw-ix14.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
-
- The USDA continues its barrage of press releases featuring the fines they
- are assessing for violations of the animal welfare act. But these fines
- are almost always suspended instantly, yet the USDA uses the total number
- of fines assesed in its PR information. Note the following 2 examples
- recieved today, the first of which involves a suspended fine so long as
- no other violations occur-- BUT THE LICENSE WAS SUSPENDED SO THERE CAN BE
- NO FURTHER VIOLATIONS--
-
- LOGAN, IOWA, ANIMAL DEALER SURRENDERS
- LICENSE TO USDA
-
- RIVERDALE, Md., April 3, 1997--The U.S.
- Department of Agriculture and Ernest Yancy,
- a licensed animal dealer doing business as S
- & Y Kennel in Logan, Iowa, have agreed to a
- consent decision and order regarding
- violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
-
- Yancy neither admitted nor denied any
- violations of the AWA but agreed to a civil
- penalty of $5,000 and will surrender his
- license. The $5,000 penalty is suspended
- provided there are no further violations of
- the AWA for a period of one year. Yancy
- will not be allowed to receive a license under the AWA for a period of
- four years.
- -----
-
- FREDERICK, S.D., ANIMAL DEALER SETTLES WITH
- USDA FOR $4,000
-
- RIVERDALE, Md., April 3, 1997--The U.S.
- Department of Agriculture and Donna Voeller,
- a licensed animal dealer doing business in
- Frederick, S.D., have agreed to a consent
- decision and order regarding violations of
- the Animal Welfare Act.
-
- Voeller neither admitted nor denied any
- violations of the AWA but agreed to a civil
- penalty of $4,000 and a 45-day license
- suspension continuing until she demonstrates
- that her facility is in full compliance with
- the AWA. The fine is suspended providing
- Voleller does not violate the AWA for a
- period of one year.
-
-
-
-
-