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Home » Article » News-and-Society To our animal friends, have we gone too far?
TrysDan Roberts filed under "News-and-Society"
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Animal and plant life existed on earth long before humans made
their evolutionary appearance. As Man evolved from Hunter and
Gatherer to a mass producing and slaughtering species, animals
have endured immense suffering.
Throughout history, animals have been used for food, medicine,
clothing and shelter...etc. Native Peoples did not harvest
animals without giving a thought to the life that was taken. It
was the complete opposite; they considered themselves a part of
the natural and spiritual worlds and had strong ties to the land
on which they lived. Many of the early cultures paid tribute to
the animals that were taken; ceremonies within these cultures
were often held for the hunted animal indicating a respect for
the animal. They considered religion a function of daily
activity, with rituals capable of influencing the interconnected
realms of physical and supernatural existence. Shamans, or
medicine men, served as priests, and they led tribal members in
rituals believed to ensure an adequate food supply. (1.)
Man, The Industrialist, has eliminated all respect for animals.
To Man, the only life of value is the human consumer. The
purpose of animals to the Industrialists and Corporate Moguls:
use animals anyway and in whatever numbers to make billions from
the fat, spoiled, lazy consumers of the industrialized
countries. There are many incidents supporting their greed:
1. Man has developed the technology to create clothing that is
furless. There is no need to kill animals for fur. But, because
of human arrogance, greed, selfishness and amoral beliefs,
millions and millions of animals are being exterminated each
year.
2. We have exploited our oceans; dumping lethal oil into the
waters, destroying marine life, and wiping out the fish stocks.
3. Polluted rivers and streams, air pollution, and using the
planet as our own personal toilet, is destroying our planet and
all of its species
How we maintain animals has deteriorated to the point of calling
the care and production of these animals genocidal, or more
fitting, speciecidal:
Avian Influenza
The disease has been suspected for more than 100 years, first
described in Italy in 1878. (2.) The major transmission from
farm to farm is the movement of infected poultry across
countries, and wild birds are only a scapegoat Mass production
and housing thousands of birds increases the chance of an
outbreak of the disease. What is likely however is that the
disease will, like human ‘flu, continue to occur in outbreaks
from now on. The structure of the modern poultry industry almost
guarantees it. (3.) Culling wild birds will never stop Avian
Influenza.
What results is the brutal mass killing of upward of 50 million
birds or more although transmission to humans is very low. At
some point in their lifetime, most people have likely consumed
meat from a chicken that was a virus carrier.
Mad Cow Disease (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy/BSE)
Mad Cow Disease is the commonly used name for Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy (BSE), a slowly progressive, degenerative, fatal
disease affecting the central nervous system of adult cattle.
(4.) The disease is spread by moving animals from country to
country and by mixing dead animal tissue (brain and spinal cord)
in the cattle feed. What resulted from the lack of concern for
the cattle, themselves, was a widespread slaughter of millions
of animals.
Because we have evolved to a mass producing species, animals
have become a means to fulfilling our gluttonous desires and
obsessions. Somewhere along the evolutionary ladder, we decided
that it was ok to brutalize animals as long it benefits or
amuses us.
We can’t help but wonder if the human race will become its own
worst enemy that cannot be defeated. We should look to our past,
at traditional native peoples’ respect for the animals they
hunted. We can learn so much from our past, not just the
mistakes.
Endnotes:
1. Native Americans of North America. Microsoft Encarta
Encyclopedia Standard 2004 Arlene Hirschfelder, Ned Blackhawk,
Trudy Griffin-Pierce, David J. Meltzer, Carl Waldman © 1993-2003
Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. 2. Dr Hugh Buck
Avian Influenza – a veterinary doctor's opinion
http://www.birdlife.org/action/change/avian_flu/hugh_buck.html ©
2004 BirdLife. The global bird conservation alliance working
together for birds and people. Retrieved April 3 2004 3. Dr Hugh
Buck Avian Influenza – a veterinary doctor's opinion
http://www.birdlife.org/action/change/avian_flu/hugh_buck.html ©
2004 BirdLife 4. Commonly Asked Questions About BSE in Products
Regulated by FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
(CFSAN) FDA/Center for Food Safety & Applied Nutrition
http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~comm/bsefaq.html January 14, 2004;
Updated January 30, 2004 Retrieved April 3 2004
Copyright 2004 © TrysDan Roberts www.trysdansbooks.com word
count: 757 words
About the author:
TrysDan Roberts is a freelance writer and published author of
the novel, The Sinking Of Noah's Ark, as well as several
published short stories. Permission is granted to post any of
TrysDan's articles that have been submitted to goarticles.com on
websites provided that the author is acknowledged and the link
to the authors site, www.trysdansbooks.com is placed in the
authors bio.
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