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5月31日

I am an Elephant

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http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20070419_Stu_Bykofsky___I_am_an_elephant.html

Stu Bykofsky | I am an elephant

I AM AN ELEPHANT.
I was not born for your amusement any more than
you were born for mine.


If you see me in the zoo, and especially in the circus,
which arrived here yesterday,

I am not there willingly.

I was kidnapped and carried far,
far away from my home and my family.

I might have been an adult, but was more likely
a baby when captured.

Some "brave" hunter might have killed my mother
- who could be dangerous

- and sold me to a zoo or circus as an orphan.

Elephants have large families, as you may know,
each headed by a female.

When a female is born into the family herd,
she never leaves.


Closely and happily, we travel together, eat together,
play together, rest together.

For elephants, every herd is a "village" in which the
baby is cared for by its mother,

and her sisters, and her mother.
Being connected to family is as much a part
of our being as our floppy ears.

It harms us to be separated from our family.
Can you understand that?


Do you think I cannot feel loneliness and despair?

As you may know, we elephants grieve for our dead.
We mourn for our family.
Being disconnected from our family is like death for us.


That is what we suffer when we are captured,
and kidnapped, and sold.


I am an elephant.

I know you love seeing me, in the circus or in the zoo.

I know some of you feel that,
"It isn't a circus without elephants,"

or, "It isn't a zoo without elephants."

You are thinking about yourself -
what you want, what you like.


Please think about me.

I am an elephant.

Do you think I was born to be chained to a stake,
when my spirit cries to cross vast savannas?
Do you think I was made to be pushed into
cramped circus railway cars,

to be hauled around the country like furniture?

I perform for eight minutes for your pleasure,
then spend endless hours in misery.


Some zoos try hard to accommodate my
physical and psychological needs,

but few succeed.

My first need is spiritual and that was crushed when
they stole me from my family in Africa.


In Africa, my numbers are dwindling as poachers
slaughter my kind for a few pounds of ivory.


Imagine killing a majestic, five-ton animal
for scraps of ivory.

Does that offend your sense of decency?

And yet you don't think twice about the
slow death of imprisoning me in a barren cage.


You believe letting your children get close to a
captive elephant will make them appreciate me.

Must that come at my expense?
Can't they learn from videos, DVDs
and Web casts, without my suffering?


Can't you teach them about the
dignity of living animals by leaving us alone?


When you and your children see me do a
circus "trick," you are delighted.


You don't ask yourself,
"How did they make that elephant stand on his head?"

I never stand on my head in the wild.

Was it positive reinforcement, as Ringling says?
Was it through abuse, as undercover videos have shown?

I am an elephant.

My second need is for physical stimulation, by walking.
My long legs are built to move.

I walk a dozen or more miles a day, when I am free to.

No circus, and few zoos, give me what I need.

And still I hear you want to see me in a zoo,
you want to see me perform circus "tricks."


You want to see me because you love me, you say.

If you love me, don't do this to me.

I am an elephant. *

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5月30日

Beagles

Hi Everyone,
This article about Beagles being flown to France by Air Canada for experiments appeared in today's Gazette http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=0010ae9f-d017-444f-8bb8-3b69dedf7528.  
What a disgrace!  I encourage all of you to voice your opinions to Air Canada, and tell them that such unethical business practice is simply unacceptable.  
While Air Canada can say that they don't have a right to intervene, they could refuse to carry the animals if they chose to change their policy.  As a long time supporter of Air Canada, and an Aeroplan member, I will certainly make my concerns known to the airline directly, however, the supplier(s) of the beagles will likely find another way to sell these dogs for research.  Unfortunately even if the airline (Air Canada) were to refuse to carry the dogs, the supplier(s) are a huge part of the problem.  It is still important to let the air carrier know how we feel about this so please send them your comments and complaints.
Here is Air Canada's contact information:
For complaints, comments or inquiries:
In Canada or U.S.
Fax: 1-866-584-0380
In Canada or U.S.
Air Canada - Customer Relations
PO Box 64239,
5512 4th Street, NW
Calgary, AB, Canada
T2K 6J0

From all other countries
Air Canada - Customer Relations
Air Canada Complex
Radius Park
Hatton Cross
Feltham, Middlesex
England
TW14 ONJ

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Beagles flown to labs for testing

Air Canada confirms shipments to Europe

MAX HARROLD, The Gazette

Published: Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Speeding down the runway in Dorval May 21, Air Canada passengers bound for Paris heard a lot more than just the jet's engines wailing.

Dogs were yelping in the cargo hold beneath them.

The estimated 70 to 100 healthy beagles were among many regular - and perfectly legal - trans-Atlantic shipments by Air Canada of dogs destined for medical experiments.Passengers on the flight found the sound of the dogs very distressing.

"All we could hear during the boarding and before the takeoff was barking, crying and whimpering," said one passenger in business class on Flight 870 who did not want to be identified.

After landing in Paris, passengers saw three pallets with cages of two dogs each being unloaded from the Airbus 330 aircraft.

"Their tails were wagging through the cages," said one passenger, who also asked not to be identified.

"We were shocked to hear some flight attendants say this goes on regularly - dogs get shipped to Paris for experiments." Because Quebec's animalprotection law is vague and weakly enforced, the province provides a steady source of dogs for laboratories both here and abroad, animal rights activists said.

"Fifty per cent of all dogs used for medical research in Canada are used in Quebec," said Liz White, a director of the Animal Alliance of Canada, a national animal rights group.

Figures found on the website the Canadian Council on Animal Care, a government-funded organization that monitors animal research, show 5,610 dogs were "used" in Quebec in 2005.

That same year, 5,127 dogs were used in all the other provinces combined.

Despite a tough new provincial animal-welfare law enacted 2004, "Quebec is a frontier province for animal abusers," White said.

"There are very few bylaws, there is a high euthanasia rate by pet owners), and the claim rate for lost pets is very low." The Quebec atmosphere helps medical researchers trade in animals, she said.

Only four inspectors enforce Quebec's animal-welfare law, which allows for fines of $200 to $15,000 for repeat offenders. In Ontario, more than 200 inspectors enforce animal-welfare regulations.

Suzanne Lecomte, chief inspector with Anima-Quebec, a not-for-profit agency that applies the new law, said the "law is vague. It says simply you cannot compromise the safety and welfare of the animal." Linda Robertson, director of the Monteregie SPCA, said beagles are often used in research because they are particularly docile.

"You can do with a beagle whatever you want," she said.

"It's not going to bite you." The breed can be tailor-made to develop certain cancers, she added.

Pierre Barnoti, executive director of the SPCA in Montreal, said his group has been aware of the air shipments for years.

"Our investigators have checked out the dogs' health and they're fine," Barnoti said.

"These are not puppy mill dogs," he said.

Claude Morin, president of Air Canada Cargo, confirmed the existence of animal shipments for medical research.

"It's completely legal," Morin said. "The animals are treated perfectly (en route).We don't really ask too many questions about where they're going.

Clients don't have to tell us anything." Air Canada spokesperson Isabelle Arthur said a 1998 ruling by the Canadian Transportation Agency forbids the airline from refusing to ship animals simply because of their purpose. The ruling was made after Air Canada refused to carry monkeys intended for vivisection.

But Jadrino Huot, a spokesperson for the CTA, said the ruling was made to force Air Canada to apply its own policies and that the airline was entirely within its rights to change its policies.

"Air travel is a deregulated industry," he said. "They set their own policies." One Air Canada flight attendant, who asked not to be identi- fied, said the dog shipments have been kept "hush, hush." "It's a business," she said.

"They shouldn't be doing this." mharrold@ thegazette.canwest.com

© The Gazette (Montreal) 2007

5月13日

Happy Mother's Day!

Rescued Just in Time for Mother's Day...

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Vivette was in quarantine at an overcrowded shelter awaiting euthanasia with her four beautiful babies. She was quarantined by the health department for biting the person who decided to capture her and sentence her to death. CCL stepped in and bailed her out - just in time for Mother's Day.
 
Happy Mother's Day!
 
 
Cute email I received...
*A Cat and Your Chapstick*


We had this great 10 year old cat named Jack who just recently died.
Jack was a great cat and the kids would carry him around and sit on
him and  nothing ever bothered him.  He used to hang out and nap all day long
on this mat in our bathroom. Well we have 3 kids and at the time of
this 
story they were 4 years old, 3 years old and 1 year old.  The middle
one  is Eli.  Eli really loves chapstick.  LOVES it.  He kept asking to
use my  chapstick and then losing it.  So finally one day I showed him where
in  the bathroom I keep my chapstick and how he could use it whenever he 
wanted to but he needed to put it right back in the drawer when he
was  done.

 Last year on Mother's Day, we were having the typical rush around and
try  to get ready for Church with everyone crying and carrying on.  
My two boys are fighting over the toy in the cereal box.  
I am trying to nurse  my little one at the same time I am putting on my make-up.
Everything is  a mess and everyone has long forgotten that this is a wonderful day
to  honor me and the amazing job that is motherhood.

 We finally have the older one and the baby loaded in the car and I am
 looking for Eli.  I have searched everywhere and I finally round the 
corner to go into the bathroom.  And there was Eli.  He was applying
my  chapstick very carefully to Jack's . . . rear end.  Eli looked right
into  my eyes and said "chapped."  Now if you have a cat, you know that he
is  right--their little butts do look pretty chapped.
 And, frankly, Jack  didn't seem to mind.

 And the only question to really ask at that point was whether it was
the FIRST time Eli had done that to the cat's behind or the hundredth.
And  THAT is my favorite Mother's Day moment ever because it reminds us
that  no matter how hard we try to civilize these glorious little
creatures,  there will always be that day when you realize they've been using
your  chapstick on the cat's butt.