Tuesday, December 8, 2009

WHOSE SKIN ARE YOU IN?

The following article has been taken from a PETA site to let my readers know about the cruelty in the leather industry.
Think you'd look cool in that leather jacket? How cool would you feel if you knew that you could be wearing baby goats' skin-or even skin from dogs? Cows aren't the only species whose skins wind up in shoes and handbags-pigs on factory farms, exotic animals like kangaroos and alligators, and dogs and cats just like our own beloved companions (who are killed for meat in China and other countries and whose skins are then imported into the U.S.) are among the millions of animals slaughtered every year for the global leather industry.
Confined to filthy stalls barely bigger than their own bodies, breeding pigs on factory farms spend their entire lives on concrete-unable to forage or do anything that comes naturally to them. These sensitive animals are subjected to agonizing mutilations like teeth-clipping, ear-notching, castration, and tail-docking-all without painkillers. Constantly pregnant or nursing, sows are squeezed into narrow metal "iron maiden" stalls, unable even to turn around. Although pigs are naturally social animals, their stress level is so high that they often resort to cannibalism and tail-biting when packed into crowded pens or when they are kept isolated and confined. Lack of exercise causes pigs to become so weak that they can barely walk a few yards. At the slaughterhouse, workers jab metal hooks into their eyes, mouths, or rectums to force them to move faster. Pigs inadequately "stunned" by bolt guns and bludgeoning with gate poles, hammers, and wrenches may be fully conscious when immersed in a tank of scalding water for hair removal.


EXOTIC SKINS
Other species are hunted and killed specifically for their skins, including zebras, bison, water buffaloes, boars, deer, kangaroos, elephants, eels, sharks, dolphins, seals, walruses, frogs, crocodiles, lizards, and snakes. A large percentage of imported crocodile shoe leather and other items made from wildlife come from endangered, illegally hunted animals. Humane treatment is not a priority of poachers and hunters who deal in the dirty exotic leather trade:


Goats may be boiled alive to make kid gloves, and the skins of purposely aborted calves and lambs are considered especially "luxurious."Snakes and lizards are often skinned alive because of the belief that live flaying imparts suppleness to the finished leather.Alligators on factory farms are packed into half-sunken sheds, immersed in filthy stagnant water rife with their own waste and the stench of rancid meat.Crocodiles are often caught in the wild with huge hooks and wires and reeled in when they become weakened from blood loss or drown.Many animals are skinned when they are still alive-sometimes remaining conscious and in agony for up to two hours-and then beaten to death with hammers, axes, and aluminum baseball bats.In Australia, where millions of kangaroos are slaughtered every year for their hides, orphaned joeys and wounded kangaroos are considered collateral damage and the government mandates that they be decapitated or hit sharply on the head "to destroy the brain.


"DOGS AND CATS Other skins come from more familiar faces. Hundreds of thousands of dog and cat skins are traded in Europe each year (with an estimated 2 million killed in China to meet the demand). Many are bought unknowingly by consumers since products made from dog and cat fur are often intentionally mislabeled and do not accurately indicate their origin. In France, more than 20,000 cats are stolen for the skin trade annually; during a police raid on a tannery, 1,500 cat skins, used to make baby shoes, were seized. 

Monday, December 7, 2009

Amazing Animal Facts



  1. The blue whale is the largest creature that has ever lived on earth. It tips the scales at a whopping 170 tons, that's the same as about 22 elephants. Its heart is the size of a small car, and its largest blood vessels are wide enough for an adult to swim through without much difficulty.
  2. The largest land animal in the world is the Kodiak Bear. It weights about 862 kgs, which is roughly the same as 14 male gymansts.
  3. Woodpeckers slam their heads into wood at a rate of 20 pecks per second. What protects them from injury is a spongy area that sits behind their beaks and acts as a shock absorber.
  4. Proximately 50% of all orangutans have fractured bones, a result of falling off trees on a regular basis.
  5. Giraffes and humans have the same number of bones in their necks: seven.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Cruelty Free Cleaning Products

The following are some of the cruelty free cleaning products producers.
  1. Allens Naturally
  2. Aspen Clean
  3. Astonish - UK
  4. Alba Botanica
  5. Avalon
  6. Balm Balm ( Also available in some of the Asian Countries)
  7. Dr.Bronner Magical Soap
  8. Earth Alive
  9. Hain - Celestial
  10. Live for Tomorrow
Please encourage some of these or all of these retailers to distribute more Cruelty Free products to all of us.

Thanks
Bharadwaj

Friday, December 4, 2009

Thanks to All

These days, I am feeling very happy. When I restarted writing on this blog, I have never expected that, my blog would be read by so many people. I just started this blog to post my random thoughts, but one video which i have seen has changed my entire perspective and focus about this blog.

I am really thankful to all my readers and without their encouragement, it would be very difficult to keep up the motivation. Really i thank one and all for encouraging me. In the mean time i have met with some excellent writers and their blogs too inspired me a lot. All in all, its fun and a great learning experience.

I once again thank all the people who have subscribed to my posts via Email, who are on Friend connect, who left their comments in the shout box, and last but not least those who are regularly giving their comments on my blog.

Thank you very much friends for supporting me to this extent. Please keep reading my blog and keep on giving your feedback.

Yours Faithfully
Bharadwaj.