Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
General
GeneralCardiologyVisionDentistryPharmacyLaboratoryNutritionAlternative
Diseases and Disorders
AIDSAlzheimer'sArthritisAsthmaCancerBreast CancerDiabetesEpilepsyGlaucomaHepatitisHerpesLupusProstate BPHProstate CancerProstatitisSinusitisTinnitus

Medical Forum / General / Alternative / October 2008

Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

Increased Animal Experimentation

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
Visual Purple - 31 Oct 2008 01:46 GMT
Increased Animal Experimentation

About a year ago, Alex Jones showed a document that criminalizes
certain activities that the government of the US claims "obstructs"
the flow of society and/or business. One of those activities is animal
rights endorsement. At the time it seemed so extreme and far out to me
that I made a mental note of it, but filed it away in my memory as
something not demanding immediate concern.

Now I'm concerned.

I'm nobody's vegan, or even vegetarian, but I do recognize the fact
that animals have rights to life.

I cannot accept animal testing on products.

I went to get my Son some more of his favorite body wash/shampoo for
men. It's an Israeli brand called "Hawaii".

I looked at the label on the back of the squeeze bottle for some
reason, even though I was quite sure that the bunny that shows that
it's not tested on animals is on the label. It wasn't.

I was almost positive that if we embraced the product as a "regular"
that it must not be tested on animals.

I didn't buy the body wash/shampoo. I wanted to double check at home.
Sure enough, when I got home I saw that the squeeze bottle we have
does have a bunny on it and says that the product is not tested on
animals.

I checked other products in the store. Again, products that I am quite
sure had the bunny and said they were not tested on animals now do not
have the bunny on them.

I am not talking about products we import through Unilever, which
never had the bunny on them. I'm talking about the products I once
felt confident were cruelty-free.

This may be a trend in regression to animal experimentation.

Please be very careful about the products you buy, even those you
thought are cruelty-free may not be now.

If you care, please check every product that you buy.

Boycott any products that experiment on animals. Those experiments are
horrific.

Even products for babies can be, and some are, formulated without
testing on animals.

There is simply no excuse for it and nothing justifies a company
reverting back to testing on animals when they know damn well that the
products they formulated were just fine without testing them on
animals.

I am going to send this notification to a number of companies and let
them know that I am broadcasting this all over the net.

Please join with me in both protesting this wanton cruelty and letting
the companies know we will boycott any product that was developed by
torturing a helpless animal.

This is not some kooky cause. This is a very real necessity. Animals
are treated horrendously by people interested in nothing but profits
and that includes many, many industries.

This is a list of products to boycott. They remain recalcitrant in the
face of ongoing boycott. More people are needed to stop buying their
products to break their backs.

None of these products are essential and none do not have cruelty-free
alternative products on the market.

Avon Cosmetics Jeyes
Beiersdorf Johnson & Johnson
The Body Shop/L'Oreal+ Lancome
Chanel Lever Faberge
Christion Dior L'Oreal/Nestle
Clinique Miners Cosmetics
Colgate Palmolive PZ Cussons
Coty Reckitt Benckiser
Ecover* Revlon
Estיe Lauder SC Johnson
FCUK Virgin Vie
Garnier Yardley
Givenchy Yves Rocher
GlaxoSmithKline Yves Saint Laurent
Helena Rubenstein Unilever

Unilever markets widely in Israel. They are a very aggressive company.
Though their site claims that they are committed to phasing out
experiments on animals, they appear on the lists of offending
companies.

None of the products that they market in Israel are indicated that
they do not do testing on animals - not one.

I have written to them complaining about this.

The e-addies are:

feedback.israel at unilever dot com

sherut.israel at unilver dot com

D2
Mark Probert - 31 Oct 2008 02:08 GMT
> Increased Animal Experimentation
>
> About a year ago, Alex Jones showed a document that criminalizes
> certain activities that the government of the US claims "obstructs"
> the flow of society and/or business. One of those activities is animal
> rights endorsement.

Hogwash. You can endorse anything you want by using words and speech.

(Hogwash is tested on Hogs).

At the time it seemed so extreme and far out to me
> that I made a mental note of it, but filed it away in my memory as
> something not demanding immediate concern.
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> I'm nobody's vegan, or even vegetarian, but I do recognize the fact
> that animals have rights to life.

However, their "rights" do not equal those of human rights. Animals
are not people.

> I cannot accept animal testing on products.
>
> I went to get my Son some more of his favorite body wash/shampoo for
> men. It's an Israeli brand called "Hawaii".

If you are so adamant about being against animal testing, could you
volunteer your son for some direct human testing?

Why mention that it is an Israeli brand? What has that got to do with
it? Are you concerned that it is kosher?

Mark
People For Eating Tasty Animals
Mark Probert - 31 Oct 2008 02:18 GMT
> > Increased Animal Experimentation
>
[quoted text clipped - 30 lines]
> Why mention that it is an Israeli brand? What has that got to do with
> it? Are you concerned that it is kosher?

I see that you are posting from Israel.

> Mark
> People For Eating Tasty Animals
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.