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No Place To Hide, No Chance To Escape
…another one…and another…and every second an animal dies for fashion!
Do we need to continue?
Is it enough?
It is understood that there was, there is,
and will always be SUFFER.
The Human race did and continue to do anything
to control animals and use them for their
comfort and to enjoy their luxury lifestyle.
Animals are kept in cages in zoos and circuses to entertain Humans and get them out
from their boring lives.
Animals are genetically twisted so Humans can earn more money and eat more animals' flesh.
The Human race performed violent experiments to satisfy the Human curiosity.
And the list goes on and on….
For decades, the animal rights organizations are fighting in many ways
to help those animals. It is useless. A conventional struggle
will never stop the suffer.
There is only one real way, which could end all the suffering in the world.
There is only one way to make sure that finally animals will no longer be
exploited by any Human in any way.
People are still wearing furs. Do you get it?! What hope is there that some day humans will see milk as rape, baby steal, extreme exploitation, and murder, if humans are not even beyond the so basic step - not wearing someone’s fur?
The most common method of trapping is the use of steel-jaw leghold trap; the diabolical
instrument of torture.
To lure furbearers into the trap, trappers employ a number of means including audio
recordings of a crying animal previously ensnared as of a fox caught in a steel-jaw
trap some years ago.
When unsuspecting animal puts a foot on it, its spring-loaded jaws grip the leg.
This innocent animal, which just walked by for searching for food a minute ago, is
now fighting for his life. Especially if it is a mother, which desperate to return to her young.
She will struggle and try to undo that trap with her teeth, thus breaking many of them.
She will suffer a slow, excruciating death by freezing to death, dying from hunger or attacked
by predators.
What great alternatives to choose from. How would you like to die?
By freezing, when your body freezes, one organ after another, by hunger, when you starting to
be weak, so you can't even hold your head upright or wait helpless to get eating by predator
which cut your body to pieces while you lying down and can't even move.
And do not forget the young animals which are waiting for theirs mother to come back.
From now on, they will have to manage by their selves. They could be only weeks old and
already alone at this cruel world. Their future will not be much better then theirs mothers'.
Many animals will manically chew off their own leg to escape!
Up to 1 out of every 4 trapped animals escapes by chewing off his or her own feet,
only to die later from blood loss, fever, gangrene, or predation.
If the animal succeeds with that, he will get away from the trap on three legs, but will die anyway due to infection. If he did not succeed to escape and remain alive, he will suffer for hours or even days in traps before trappers arrive. Otherwise, his future can be even worse.
When a trapper returns to kill a trapped animal, he might kill him/her.
The Trapped animal killed by clubbing, or by suffocation, to avoid damaging the pelt,
trappers usually beat or stomp their victims to death.
A common stomping method is for the trapper to stand on the animal's rib cage,
concentrating his weight near the heart.
Two examples of adequate tools are heavy iron pipe about, 18 to 24 inches long, Or an axe handle. The animal is been stricken two times, once to render her/him unconscious and again to render him/her either dead or comatose. To ensure death, he is pinning the head with one foot and stand on the chest of the animal with the other foot for several minutes. To be sure, the furbearer is dead; he touches the eye or mouth of the animal with the striking tool and watch for any reaction. He then reaches down, takes the animal's hind legs in his hands, and yanks.
Another kind of trap is the neck snares, which catch the poor animal by her/his neck. In this situation, He/she has to struggle violently to tighten the loop and, like a choke chain, this animal will often stop struggling as air intake decreases. The time of death is, in this way, often prolonged. He will die for almost six minutes. It is an excruciating death. It is self-strangulation.
One particularly appalling way in which animals caught is by the use of traps set under water. These 'drowning sets' are frequently used to catch animals such as beaver and muskrat.
Beavers are well adapted to an aquatic life, and so can take 25 minutes to die, struggling pitifully all the while, for their very own lives. During those 25 minutes the animal suffer the striking and clamping force of the jaws, as well as the panic of being held under water by a violent, mysterious force. It is a slow drowning as he fights for air while the trap pulled him deep. If they are able to drag themselves from the water, the struggle can last for days with the trap.
Somewhere in the world a trap snaps shut on an animal every second. While you read
this line, at least two animals are fighting for their lives trapped in a snare trap. It
is all for idle vain humans.
Can you realize that you are seating in front of your computer while billions of animals
are dying. What do you think? Is your next protest or your new banner can help?
Each year, in March, the Russians cull 10-12-day old baby harp seals on the White Sea. The hunters smash the skull as near to the nose as possible so as not to damage the prized white fur, the hunters are coming towards the baby seal and the naïve animal is glad there is someone he can play with. He is not familiar with the humankind cruelty.
The older seals are clubbed to death, or shot. Many do not die right away, and so some are
skinned alive!
Many are shot while they are in the water, and may escape to die later.
The leghold trap is indiscriminate as well as cruel. Trappers discard millions of animals, which are not wanted for their fur, including cats and dogs. Trapped animals sometimes leave behind dependent young who are doomed to starvation.
Millions of animals are being caught in the wild each year to satisfy the demands of the fur trade. In the USA alone, 15-20 million animals are trapped each year for their fur. Then add on the 'non intended animals' (animals which are not wanted for their fur) - two “non-targeted animals” are caught and killed for every “targeted animal” that is trapped - and the figures become 45-60 million animals trapped and killed every year. For this, individuals can pay outlandish prices to parade around in their pelts.
Eighty percent of all fur comes from farms. However, don't imagine idyllic scenes of green pastures – fur farming means factory farming. Although this sounds strange and shuddering, Animals raised to become someone’s fur coat. As with other intensive-confinement animal farms, the methods used on fur farms are designed to maximize profits, always at the expense of the animals' needs and comfort, and always at the expense of their lives.
Animals kept in the most deplorable conditions for their fur. They spend their
days exposed to the atrocity, row after row, of urine - and feces - encrusted
tiny wire-mesh cages, stacked four high and about 25 in a row, minks, foxes,
chinchillas, raccoons, and other animals peering watchfully through the wires,
a rack of pelts hanging on a wall, and a morgue-like hush.
This situation is making it very difficult for the animals to stand. Intensive,
completely unnatural confinement leads to self-mutilation, cannibalism, and a
high-level stress, which breaks down the animals' immune systems.
The animals live in conditions that go completely against their instincts.
Beavers are forced to live on cement floors instead of in the water.
The fox, who normally roams over 2,000 to 15,000 acres, is forced to stay
in a tiny cage.
Minks are solitary animals by nature, but in the farms, they are forced to
live in extremely close contact with other animals.
"Fur farms are contaminated and piles everywhere with excrement. This causes many diseases for the animals, including pneumonia, wet belly disease, and nursing disease. Flies, lice, and flees infect the cages. The smell of decay permeated the place, animals with severe injuries going and don't get any medical care". An eyewitness tells. "Foxes and minks are pacing in endless circles, crazy from the confinement. Row after row of tiny wire-mesh cages, stacked four high and about 25 in a row, chinchillas peering watchfully through the wires, a rack of pelts hanging on a far wall, and except for a radio playing softly in one corner of the room, a morgue-like hush". He continues.
The killing and injury of cubs (tail removal, biting) by their mothers is a
common problem on fur farms. It is estimated that 10 – 20 % of female farm foxes
show infanticide at some time. Cub mortality because of infanticide exceeded 50%.
Females of lower social status than their neighbors kill their cubs and have poorer
reproductive success.
Dead cubs had bite marks on their bodies, often with the skull crushed, or half eaten.
Of course, the use of insemination is common and is mostly used to produce crosses
between blue and silver foxes as their natural mating times do not coincide.
This act – A Rape - is common and duo to lack of hygiene and ripping of membranes
resulted in thousands of deaths.
After seven months, factory animals are murdered. This is usually in November when
the fur is at its peak quality.
Various methods are used for killing fur bearing animals. Many ranchers break the necks of the animals.
A common method of killing mink is gassing using either carbon dioxide (CO2) or carbon
monoxide (CO). These are of course non-anaesthetic gases and result in deficiency of
oxygen in the vital organs – particularly the brain.
When the brain becomes depressed, the animals become unconscious.
The result – a slow suffocation.
Animals are removed from their cages and placed individually in a killing box filled
with the gas. They struggle and fight. Because they are grasped very firmly this
naturally lead to stress. Most animals screech, defecate, urinate, and exude the contents
of the anal scent glands on being handled.
An alternative is the injection of a lethal drug, often performed by ranchers with
(of course) no medical training.
Another method is to connect a car exhaust to a box containing a live animal, and wait
for her/him to die. This often results that the animals are only being stunned and
therefore skinned alive, it is a horrible sight to see the skinned poor animal still moving.
Electrocution is commonly used for killing foxes. The apparatus consists of a battery, a metal bar and a clamp. The clamp is fastened around the muzzle of the fox. The bar is inserted in the animal's anus, a switch is flicked, and the electric current electrocutes the fox. Intense pain of a heart attack while fully conscious, the animals literally are burned from the inside out. The horrors and depth of suffering that these animals have to endue for Human luxury is immeasurable.
But yet, just to understand a bit of what is going on:
| Number of Target Animals in 40" Coat | Number of "Trash" Animals Per Coat | Total Hours Spent in a Trap | |
| COYOTE | 16 | 48 | 960 |
| LYNX | 18 | 54 | 1,080 |
| MINK | 60 | 180 | 3,600 |
| OPOSSUM | 45 | 135 | 2,700 |
| OTTER | 20 | 60 | 1,200 |
| RED FOX | 42 | 126 | 2,520 |
| RACCOON | 40 | 120 | 2,400 |
| SABLE | 50 | 150 | 3,000 |
| SEAL | 8 | - | 32 |
| MUSKRAT | 50 | 150 | 1,500 |
| BEAVER | 15 | 45 | 225 |
How many no-human animals are murdered for material profit and vanity? How many animals have been tortured, murdered and skinned for a coat? This will shock you...but must be read:
| 16- 26 beavers | 8-12 lynx | 120-160 hamsters |
| 5-7 blowback seals | 35-60 mink | 20 kangaroos |
| 16-20 bobcats | 60-120 muskrats | 16-20 karakul lambs |
| 30-40 broadtail lambs | 12-18 ocelots | 20-30 wallabies |
| 130-200 chinchilla | 10-16 otters | 3-5 wolves |
| 16 coyotes | 40 rabbits | 6 seals |
| 20-30 domestic cats | 20-30 raccoons | 60-70 skunks |
| 10-20 foxes | 60-80 sables | 200-400 squirrels |
| 6-10 whitecoat seals |
It is estimated that about 80-100 million animals are killed by the clothing and fur
trades every year.
A well-organized fur trade spends millions every year to glamorize the fur coat and to
mask the real price of fur – pain, mutilation and death for millions of animals.
Many wild species are considered as pests (animals that consider to damaging the environment). Therefore, all kind of hunting for fur, leather, or sport are claimed to be necessary culling - term, which usually describes the killing of animals that Humans consider to be in some way damaging the environment.
It goes without saying that humans exclude themselves from this solution though they are the single most damaging animal of all.
Only One Solution
Updated in Sep 2003
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