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Anam Cara/ElizaRose



Last Updated: 11/19/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 33
Sign: Gemini

City: Long Island
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/10/2005

Blog Archive
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Thursday, November 13, 2008 

Current mood:  artistic
Category: Writing and Poetry
Those Eyes

Those eyes, those eyes, those eyes that have always spoken to me.  Bright, searing.  The intensity still overwhelms me with a power I cannot explain, too much to look into, like the sun, but so mesmerizing I can't look away.  They say that the eyes are the doorway to the soul, if that is true, then I have sent the most beautiful of souls.


Dear Great Spirit take not those eyes, that look at me so lovingly, away.  My soul would weep with bitter unending grief, if they were to be taken from me again.  So long I have waited, yearned and dreamt of seeing them again.


Those eyes have told me that mine are as beautiful.  Do those eyes see as much in mine as mine do in those?  Would those eyes go away if they knew how deeply my eyes have seen and how much deeper they wish to go?  My eyes will be patient and wait.  My eyes will not betray all that my soul yeans to have.  Take not those eyes away
Thursday, November 13, 2008 

Current mood:  artistic
Category: Writing and Poetry
Soul Dancing.. 

The soul of one intertwines with the soul of another and the dance that occurs is a dance of radiant light and love.


My soul danced in joy today.  It communed with another in harmony.  The music of our souls played in perfect tune.  There were no bodies of flesh, just pure bodies of light.  It seemed as if I had imbibed pure energy and I needed nothing else.  The stars aligned; all the world came into focus, as I never had seen it before.  All negativity fell away.  When was the last time that happened?  Too long to remember, but in a flash it was there.  As if I had returned to the perfect balance of early childhood, when the world had not tainted me yet with experience.  When I was still connected to my inner self and the spirit realm.  I felt as if I was on a different plain of existence, connected, contented, free to love and to be loved.


Music has been my conduit to this realm, but I never full got in; just catching glimpses of it.  But today, oh today I burst through that barrier into the brightest sunshine.  I hold onto it and know that through music and now soul dancing, I can go there anytime.
Wednesday, May 21, 2008 

Current mood:  thoughtful
Category: Life
He was so cute and smart.  He wanted to see all the toys and stuffed dolls on my desk.  I bent down to his level and showed him all the toys and he smiled.  I don't know who had more fun, him or me.  He is 2 with big brown wide eyes and longish brown hair.  Too sweet for words.  I hope it will be my turn soon.  I have often though about children and whether I would want them.  I think now I do.  I would love to teach them so much.  To bring them up to question, learn, explore, love, sing, dance and play.  Children, I think, teach us more than we teach them.
Friday, May 09, 2008 

Current mood:  thoughtful
Category: Life

The rain pours softly down, intermingling with my tears.  The weather echoing our sorrow.  I say goodbye-not to one, but to two.  Separated by no more that a concrete path.  Too close, too soon.

 

I watch as the little streamlets ripple and gleam steadily down through the fallen petals of the trees on the road.  I think back to a time, through almost a magic door, to when life was easier and more innocent.  When a rainy day did not mean drudgery and dreariness.  When it meant opportunity and fun.  There were puddles to splash in and mud to play in.  To feel the warm droplets splash upon your happy upturned face.  When the only thing that marred the fun was mom and/or dad told you to come in.  Begrudgingly and slowly you would make your way back home, making sure to splash in every puddle on you way back.  Then glancing back once more at the unfinished fun, before heading in.

 

When did it all change?  When did rain change from fun to dreary.  Why does our innocence have to leave?  Can we ever get it back?  Maybe we can, maybe if we watch the children.  See our world through their eyes.  Wrack our brains and memories and fall back through time and really remember our childhood.  Remember what it feels like to be a child once more.  Go out into the rain again, experience it, accept it, feel it on your skin again.  Go out and play just as you did once.  DON'T CARE what other might think.  Play as you've never played before, kick a ball, swing a bat, run a race with all your might, role down a hill and laugh till your seams burst.  Rejoice with all your soul that you are alive- LIVE!  It's what the two who are separated from us by a thin veil would want us to do.  So come, come with me, join me in the play time that is this life.  I will wait outside for all who wish to come, in the park, on the field or in the backyard.  Come and play!

Thursday, May 08, 2008 

Current mood:  determined
Category: Goals, Plans, Hopes

Bubbly

Will you count me in?

I've been awake for a while now

You've got me feeling like a child now

Cause every time I see your bubbly face

I get the tinglies in a silly place

 

It starts in my toes

And I crinkle my nose

Wherever it goes I always know

That you make me smile

Please stay for a while now

Just take your time

Wherever you go

 

The rain is falling on my window pane

But we are hiding in a safer place

Under the covers staying dry and warm

You give me feelings that I adore

 

It starts in my toes

Makes me crinkle my nose

Wherever it goes I always know

That you make me smile

Please stay for a while now

Just take your time

Wherever you go

 

What am I goona say?

When you make me feel this way

I just...

 

It starts in my toes

Makes me crinkle my nose

Wherever it goes

I always know

That you make me smile

Please stay for a while now

Just take your time

Wherever you go

 

I've been asleep for a while now

You tucked me in just like a child now

Cause every time you hold me in your arms

I'm comfortable enough to feel your warmth

 

Its starts in my SOUL

and I lose control

When you kiss my nose

The feeling shows

Cause you make me smile

Baby just take your time now

Holding me tight

 

Wherever, wherever, wherever you go

Wherever, wherever, wherever you go

Wherever, wherever, wherever you go

Cause you make me smile

Even just for a while

 

Wednesday, May 07, 2008 

Current mood:  nostalgic
Category: Blogging

Revelation

I've always been a loner,

always in the shelter of my mind.

Alone in my thoughts and dreams.

But now it's time to emerge,

like a blossom ready to bloom.

To make all that once was unreal, tangable.

 

I have come full circle.

It's time to complete the puzzle.

The last pieceis all I need to make my life complete.

 

My soul has now grown to the point

where I can accept myself and another.

So now I am ready for that extension.

That last part to finally be at peace.

 

Ever since I was a child

I've been with you.

Always seeing glimpses of you in others

Not knowing the pain I was going through

was to prepare me for you.

When the time was right

to give unto you

my fullest gifts of love and joy.

 

Now the time has come

for us to be as one.

And yet I still tremble unsure

not knowing all that still lies within you.

But how can I doubt,

When I see all that dwells within your bright eyes.

For you, like me, must reveal

what has been hidden.

And come out and finally live in

the light-In the light of the sun.

 

 

Tuesday, May 06, 2008 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Blogging

My very dear friend's father passed on yesterday.  My heart is ripping and tearing from the unbelievable grief I feel for them and for myself.  She lost her father in the most despicable way.  I can only imagine how she and her family feel on top of the already overwhelming grief.

I am so thankful that I could say goodbye to him and tell him that I loved him.  I am thankful that she and her family were there with him the whole time, right up to the very end.  It may not seem so now, but they will be happy for this one day.  I was not so lucky to be there with my mom when she went.  I was robbed of the opportunity to see her anytime before her death.  I could not tell her one more time how much I loved her, to kiss and hug her goodbye...But she and I had one last special trip before she actually left this plain of existence.  She came to me as I had requested of her (upon her death)  She told me she could move her hands, her eyes glinted with the old spark I remembered them to have.  We were in a car driving through a white mist.  I believe I took her to heaven.  So even if I couldn't see her off and be with her physically, I took her home spiritually.  My life has never been the same since.

It is too close to the time of my own's mother's passing.  We were closer than too people could ever be.  I miss her more than words can ever say.  She taught me so much and loved me more unconditionally than anyone ever has.  Our bond has not severed with death.  I only wish with all my heart that all parents and children could have the bond that we did.

I write this blog, yes for myself, but also for anyone else who has suffered from the agonizing pain of loss.  I have been given back many relationships I had thought lost forever.  I have been given the gift of new and wonderful ones.  My wish of this blog is that no one ever forgets how much love is important in this world.  Tell people as much as you can that you care about them, that you love them whether you met them recently or have known them forever.  Life is way to short to let those moments ever pass you by.  You may regret it in the end if you didn't say I love you♥, or I am thinking of you or to say I am sorry or even that you make me smile.  We need to be more open about our feelings for people.  Feelings and love and emotions are what makes us human, we can't lose that.  So hug your parents, children, siblings, wives, husbands, boy/girlfriens, friends and everyone and make sure they know you mean it.  I love all my friends all, old and new with all my heart.  I love you mom and dad, I will never forget you, nor will your memories ever die.  Someday we will all be together, but for now I am content with all the good you do for me from where you are.

My best wishes go to all today who are suffering and in pain and I am.  Also for all who have suffered in the past and who will inevitably suffer in the future.

thank you for listening and understanding

ElizaRose

Thursday, March 06, 2008 

Current mood:  accomplished

50 Disasters Caused by Vivisection
Bad Science:

1. Benzene was not withdrawn from use as an industrial chemical despite clinical and epidemiological evidence that exposure caused leukemia in humans, because manufacturer-supported tests failed to reproduce leukemia in mice.[1]

2. Smoking was thought to be non-carcinogenic, because smoking-related cancer is difficult to reproduce in lab animals. Consequently, many continued to smoke and to die from cancer.[2]

3. Animal experiments on rats, hamsters, guinea pigs, mice, monkeys, and baboons revealed no link between glass fibers and cancer. Not until 1991, due to human studies, did OSHA label it carcinogenic.[3][4][5]

4. Though arsenic was a known human carcinogen for decades, scientists still found little evidence in animals to support the conclusion as late as 1977.[6] This was the accepted view until it was eventually possible to produce in animals.[7][8][9]

5. Many humans continued to be exposed to asbestos and die because scientists could not reproduce the cancer in laboratory animals.

6. Pacemakers and heart valves were delayed in development because of physiological differences between animals on which they were designed and humans for whom they were intended.

7. Animal models of heart disease failed to show that a high-cholesterol / high-fat diet increases the risk of coronary artery disease. Instead of changing their eating habits to prevent the disease, people continued their lifestyles with a false sense of security.

8. Patients received medications that were harmful and/or ineffective due to animal models of stroke.

9. Animal studies predicted that beta-blockers would not lower blood pressure. This withheld their development.[10][11][12] Even animal experimenters admitted the failure of animal models of hypertension in this regard - but, in the meantime, there were thousands more stroke victims.

10. Surgeons thought they had perfected radial keratotomy, surgery performed to enable better vision without glasses, on rabbits - but the procedure blinded the first human patients. (The rabbit cornea is able to regenerate on the underside, whereas the human cornea can only regenerate on the surface). Surgery is now performed only on the surface.
11. Combined heart-lung transplants were supposedly 'perfected' on animals, but the first 3 human patients all died within 23 days.[13] Of the 28 patients operated on between 1981 and 1985, 8 died peri-operatively, and 10 developed obliterative bronchiolitis - a lung complication that the dogs on whom experiments had been conducted did not develop. Of those 10 humans who developed obliterative bronchiolitis, 4 died and 3 never breathed again without the aid of a respirator. Obliterative bronchiolitis turned out to be the most important risk of the operation.[14]

12. Cyclosporin A inhibits organ rejection, and its development was a watershed in the success of transplant operations. Had human evidence not overwhelmed unpromising evidence from animals, it would never have been released.[15]

13. Animal experiments failed to predict the kidney toxicity of the general anesthetic methoxyflurane. Many people lost all kidney function.

14. Animal experiments delayed the use of muscle relaxants during general anesthesia.

15. Research on animals failed to reveal bacteria as a cause of ulcers and delayed treating ulcers with antibiotics.

16. More than half of the 198 new medications released between 1976 and 1985 were either withdrawn or relabeled secondary to severe unpredicted side effects.[16] These side effects included complications such as lethal dysrhythmias, heart attacks, kidney failure, seizures, respiratory arrest, liver failure, and stroke - among others.

17. Flosint, an arthritis medication, was tested on rats, monkeys and dogs; all tolerated the medication well. However, in humans, it caused deaths.

18. Zelmid, an antidepressant, was tested on rats and dogs without incident - but it caused severe neurological problems in humans.

19. Nomifensine, another antidepressant, was linked to kidney and liver failure, anemia, and death in humans. And yet animal testing had indicated that it could be used without side-effects occurring.

20. Amrinone, a medication used for heart failure, was tested on numerous animals and was released without any trepidation. But humans developed thrombocytopenia, a lack of the type of blood cells that are needed for clotting.

21. Fialuridine, an antiviral medication, caused liver damage in 7 out of 15 people. 5 eventually died and 2 more needed liver transplants.[17] And yet it had worked well in woodchucks.[18][19]

22. Clioquinol, an antidiarrheal, passed tests in rats, cats, dogs, and rabbits. But it had to be withdrawn all over the world in 1982 after it was found to cause blindness and paralysis in humans.

23. Eraldin, a medication for heart disease, caused deaths and blindness in humans despite the fact that no untoward effects could be shown in animals. When introduced, scientists said it was noted for the thoroughness of toxicity studies on animals. Afterwards, scientists were unable to reproduce these results in animals.[20]

24. Opren, an arthritis medication, killed 61 people. Over 3500 cases of severe reactions have been documented. Opren had been tested on monkeys and other animals without problems.

25. Zomax, another arthritis drug, was responsible for the deaths of 14 people and caused suffering to many more.

26. The dose of isoproterenol, a medication used to treat asthma, was calculated in animals. Unfortunately, it was much too toxic for humans. 3500 asthmatics died in Great Britain alone due to overdose. It is still difficult to reproduce these results in animals.[21][22][23][24][25][26]

27. Methysergide, a medication used to treat headaches, led to retroperitoneal fibrosis, or severe scarring of the heart, kidneys, and blood vessels in the abdomen.[27] Scientists have been unable to reproduce this in animals.[28]

28. Suprofen, an arthritis drug, was withdrawn from the market when patients suffered kidney toxicity. Prior to its release, researchers had this to say about the animal tests: '…excellent safety profile. No…cardiac, renal, or CNS [central nervous system] effects in any species'.[29][30]

29. Surgam, another arthritis drug, was designed to have a stomach protection factor that would prevent stomach ulcers - a common side effect of many arthritis drugs. Although promising in lab animal tests, ulcers occurred in human trials.[31][32]

30. Selacryn, a diuretic, was thoroughly tested on animals - but it was withdrawn in 1979 after 24 people died from drug induced liver failure.[33][34]
31. Perhexiline, a heart medication, was withdrawn when it produced liver failure which had not been predicted by animal testing. Even when the particular type of liver failure was known, it could not be induced in animals.

[35] 32. Domperidone, designed as a treatment for nausea and vomiting, made human hearts beat irregularly and had to be withdrawn. Scientists were unable to reproduce this in dogs even with 70 times the normal dose.[36][37]

33. Mitoxantrone, a treatment for cancer, produced heart failure in humans. It was extensively tested on dogs, which did not manifest this effect.[38][39]

34. Carbenoxalone was supposed to prevent formation of gastric ulcers but caused people to retain water to the point of heart failure. After vivisectors knew what it did to humans, they tested it on rats, mice, monkeys, and rabbits but could not reproduce this effect.[40][41]

35. Clindamycin, an antibiotic, causes a bowel condition called pseudomenbraneous colitis. And yet it was tested in rats and dogs every day for a year; moreover, these animals were able to tolerate doses ten times greater than humans are able to.[42][43][44]

36. Animal experiments did not support the efficacy of valium-type drugs during development or subsequently.[45][46]

37. The pharmaceutical companies Pharmacia and Upjohn discontinued clinical tests of its Linomide (roquinimex) tablets for the treatment of multiple sclerosis after several patients suffered heart attacks. Of 1,200 patients, 8 suffered heart attacks as a result of taking the medication. Animal experiments had not predicted this.
38. Cylert (pemoline), a medication used to treat Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder, caused liver failure in 13 children. Eleven either died or required a liver transplant.

39. Eldepryl (selegiline), a medication used to treat Parkinson's disease, was found to induce very high blood pressure. This side effect has not been seen in animals.

40. The diet drug combination of fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine was linked to heart valve abnormalities and withdrawn, although animal studies had never revealed heart abnormalities.[47]

41. The diabetes medication troglitazone, better known as Rezulin, was tested on animals without significant problems but caused liver damage in humans. The manufacturer admitted that at least one patient had died and another had to undergo a liver transplant as a result.[48]

42. The plant digitalis has been used for centuries to treat heart disorders. However, clinical trials of the digitalis-derived drug were delayed because it caused high blood pressure in animals. Fortunately, human evidence overrode animal data; as a result, digoxin - an analogue of digitalis - has saved countless lives. Many more people could have survived had the animal testing been ignored and digitalis been released earlier.[49][50][51][52]

43. FK 506, now called Tacrolimus, is an anti-rejection agent that was almost abandoned before proceeding to clinical trials due to severe toxicity in animals.[53][54] Animal studies suggested that the combination of FK 506 with cyclosporin might prove more useful.[55] In fact, just the opposite proved true in humans.[56]

44. Animal experiments suggested that corticosteroids would help septic shock, a severe bacterial infection of the blood.[57][58] However, humans reacted differently. This treatment increased the death rate in cases of septic shock.[59]

45. Despite the ineffectiveness of penicillin in rabbits, Alexander Fleming used the antibiotic on a very sick patient since he had nothing else to try. Fortunately, Fleming's initial tests were not on guinea pigs or hamsters, because it kills them. Howard Florey, the Nobel Prize winner credited with co-discovering and manufacturing penicillin, stated: "How fortunate we didn't have these animal tests in the 1940s, for penicillin would probably never have been granted a license and possibly the whole field of antibiotics might never have been realized."
46. Fluoride, a cavity preventative, was initially withheld because it caused cancer in rats.[60][61][62]

47. The notoriously dangerous drugs thalidomide and DES were tested in animals and released for human usage. Tens of thousands suffered and/or died as a result.

48. Animal experiments misinformed researchers about how rapidly HIV replicates. Based on this false information, patients did not receive prompt therapies and their lives were shortened.

49. Animal-based research delayed the development of the polio vaccine, according to Dr. Albert Sabin, its inventor. The first rabies and polio vaccines worked well on animals but crippled or killed the people who tried them.

50. Researchers who work with animals have succumbed to illness and death due to exposure to diseases that while harmless to the animal host (such as Hepatitis B) are potentially or actually deadly for humans.

References:
[1]Lancet, June 25 1977, pp1348-9.
[2]N. Sax, Cancer-causing Chemicals, Van Nostrand 1981.
[3]The Guardian, July 20 1991.
[4]Occupational Lung Disorders, Butterworth 1982.
[5]Toxicology and Industrial Health, 1990, vol.6, pp293-307.
[6]J. Nat. Cancer Inst., 1969, vol.42, pp1045-52.
[7]Br. J. Cancer, 1947, vol.1, pp192-251.
[8]Advances in Modern Toxicology, vol.2, Wiley, 1977.
[9]J. Nat. Cancer Inst, 1962, vol.5, p459.
[10]D. Fitzgerald, The Development of New Cardiovascular Drugs in Recent Developments in Cardiovascular Drugs, eds. Coltart and Jewitt, Churchill, Livingstone, 1981.
[11]Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1980 Part 2, S9-S24.
[12]Pharmacy International, Feb. 1986; pp33-37.
[13]Lancet, i, 1983, pp130-2.
[14]Lancet, 1, no. 8480, March 8, 1996, pp517-519.
[15]Annals of Internal Medicine, 1984, vol.101, pp667-682.
[16]GAO/PEMD-90-15 FDA Drug Review: Postapproval Risks, 1976-1985.
[17]NEJM, 333;1099-1105, 1995.
[18]J. NIH Res., 1993, 5, pp33-35.
[19]Nature, 1993, July 22, p275.
[20]Nature, 1982, April 1, pp387-90. and British Medical Journal, 1983, Jan 15, pp199-202, and Drug Monitoring, 1977 and Pharmacologist, 1964, vol. 6, pp12-26, and Pharmacology: Drug Actions and Reac. and Advances in Pharm, 1963, vol. 2, pp1-112, and Nature, 1982, April 1, pp387-390.
[21]Pharmacologist, 1971, vol.18, p272.
[22]Br. J. of Pharm., 1969, Vol. 36, pp35-45.
[23]W. H. Inman, Monitoring for Drug Safety, MTP Press, 1980.
[24]Am. Rev. Resp. Diseases, 1972, vol.105, pp883-890.
[25]Lancet, 1979, Oct.27, p896.
[26]Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology,1965, vol. 7, pp1-8.
[27]Animal Toxicity Studies: Their Relevance for Man, Quay Pub. 1990.
[28]British Medical Journal, 1974, May 18, pp365-366.
[29]Drug Withdrawl from Sale, PJB Publications, 1988.
[30]Pharmacology, 1983, vol.27 (suppl 1), pp87-94, and FDA Drug Review: Postapproval Risks 1976-1985 (US GAO), April 1990.
[31]Gut, 1987, vol.28, pp515-518.
[32]Lancet, Jan 10 1987, pp113-114.
[33]Toxicolo. Letters, 1991, vol.55, pp287-293.
[34]Drug Withdrawl from Sale, PJB Publications, 1988.
[35]Reg. Tox. and Pharm., 1990, vol.11, pp288-307, and Postgraduate Med. Journal, 1973, vol.49, April Suppl., pp125-130.
[36]Drugs, 1982, vol.24, pp360-400.
[37]Animal Toxicity Studies, Quay, 1990.
[38]Lancet, 1984, July 28, pp219-220.
[39]Martindale: The Extra Pharmacopoeia, 29th edition, Pharmaceutical Press, 1989.
[40]Br. Nat. Form., no.26, 1993.
[41]Reg. Tox. and Pharm., 1990, vol.11, pp288-307.
[42]British Medical Journal, 1983, Jan 15, pp199-202.
[43]Br. Nat. Form., no.26, 1993.
[44]Tox. and Appl. Pharm., 1972, vol. 21, pp516-531.
[45]The Benzodiazepines, MTP Press, 1978.
[46]Drugs and Therapeutics Bulletin, 1989, vol.27, p28.
[47]As quot. in Activate For Animals, Oct. 1997, The American Antivivisection Society.
[48]Parke-Davis letter, dated Oct. 31, 1996.
[49]W. Sneader, Drug Discovery: The Evolution of Modern Medicine, Wiley, 1985.
[50]T. Lewis, Clinical Science, Shaw and Sons Ltd., 1934.
[51]Federation Proceedings, 1967, vol.26, pp1125-30.
[52]Toxicology In Vitro, 1992, vol.6, pp.47-52.
[53]JAMA, 1990, April 4, p1766.
[54]Lancet, 1989, July 22, p227.
[55]Lancet, 1989, Oct 28, pp1000-1004.
[56]Hepatology, 1991, vol.13, pp1259-1260.
[57]Drugs and Therapeutics Bulletin, 1990, vol.28, pp74-75.
[58]Anesthesiology: Proceedings of the VI World Congress of Anesthesiology, Mexico City 1977.
[59]NEJM, 1987, Sep. 10, pp653-658.
[60]The Causes of Cancer, 1981, Oxford Press.
[61]J. NIH. Res., 1991, vol.3, p46.
[62]Nature, 1991, Feb 28, p732.
Source: Americans for Medical Advancement www.curedisease.com
__,_._,___


33 Reasons Vivisection is Pointless

1) Less than 2% of human illnesses (1.16%) are ever seen in animals.

(2) According to the former scientific executive of Huntingdon Life Sciences, animal tests and human results agree only "5%-25% of the time." (Flipping a coin would be more accurate.)

(3) 95% of drugs passed by animal tests are immediately discarded as useless or dangerous to humans.

(4) At least 50 drugs on the market cause cancer in laboratory animals. They are allowed because it is admitted the animal tests are not relevant.

(5) Procter & Gamble used an artificial musk despite it failing the animal tests, i.e., causing tumors in mice. They said the animal test results were "of little relevance for humans."

(6) When asked if they agreed that animal experiments can be misleading "because of anatomical and physiological differences between animals and humans," 88% of doctors agreed.

(7) Rats are only 37% effective in identifying what causes cancer to humans. (Again, flipping a coin would be more accurate.)

(8) Rodents are the animals almost always used in cancer research. They never get carcinomas, the human form of cancer, which affects membranes (e.g lung cancer). Their sarcomas affect bone and connecting tissue: the two cannot be compared.

(9) Up to 90% of animal test results are discarded as they are inapplicable to man.

(10) The results from animal experiments can be altered by factors such as diet and bedding. Bedding has been identified as giving cancer rates of over 90% and almost nil in the same strain of mice at different locations.

(11) Sex differences among laboratory animals can cause contradictory results. This does not correspond with humans.

(12) 9% of anaesthetized animals, intended to recover, die.

(13) An estimated 83% of substances are metabolized by rats in a different way to humans.

(14) Attempts to sue the manufacturers of the drug Surgam failed due to the testimony of medical experts that "data from animals could not be extrapolated safely to patients."

(15) Lemon juice is a deadly poison, but arsenic, hemlock and botulin are safe according to animal tests.

(16) Genetically modified animals are not models for human illness. The mdx mouse is supposed to represent muscular dystrophy, but the muscles regenerate without treatment.

(17) 88% of stillbirths are caused by drugs which are passed as being safe in animal tests, according to a study in Germany.

(18) 61% of birth defects are caused by drugs passed safe in animal tests, according to the same study. Defect rates are 200 times post-war levels.

(19) One in six patients in hospital are there because of a treatment they have taken.

(20) In America, 100,000 deaths a year are attributed to medical treatment. In one year 1.5 million people were hospitalized by medical treatment.

(21) A World Health Organization study showed children were 14 times more likely to develop measles if they had been vaccinated.

(22) 40% of patients suffer side effects as a result of prescription treatment.

(23) Over 200,000 medicines have been released, most of which are now withdrawn. According to the World Health Organization, only 240 are "essential."

(24) A German doctors' congress concluded that 6% of fatal illnesses and 25% of organic illness are caused by medicines. All have been animal-tested.

(25) The lifesaving operation for ectopic pregnancies was delayed 40 years due to vivisection.

(26) According to the Royal Commission into vivisection (1912), "The discovery of anaesthetics owes nothing to experiments on animals." The great Dr Hadwen noted that "had animal experiments been relied upon...humanity would have been robbed of this great blessing of anaesthesia." The vivisector Halsey described the discovery of Fluroxene as "one of the most dramatic examples of misleading evidence from animal data."

(27) Aspirin fails animal tests, as does digitalis (a heart drug), cancer treatments, insulin (causes animal birth defects), penicillin, and other safe medicines. They would have been banned if vivisection were heeded.

(28) In the court case when the manufacturers of Thalidomide were being tried, they were acquitted after numerous experts agreed that animal tests could not be relied on for human medicine.

(29) Blood transfusions were delayed 200 years by animal studies, corneal transplants were delayed 90 years.

(30) Despite many Nobel prizes being awarded to vivisectors, only 45% agree that animal experiments are crucial.

(31) At least 450 methods exist with which we can replace animal experiments.

(32) At least thirty-three animals die in laboratories each second worldwide; in the UK, one every four seconds.

(33) The Director of Research Defense Society, (which exists to defend vivisection) was asked if medical progress could have been achieved without animal use. His written reply was "I am sure it could be."

Thursday, September 27, 2007 

Current mood:  contemplative
Category: Pets and Animals

Caging the beast within !
Body:  http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article2522772.ece

The Times. 25 September 2007.

Caging the beast within. Calls have been made to take into
account a history of animal cruelty when sentencing dangerous
offenders
John Cooper

Is there a link between cruelty to animals and violence to
people? Calls were made last week at Britain's first
conference on the topic for judges to take account of a
history of animal cruelty when sentencing dangerous
offenders.
Such a move is novel and, some might say, controversial. But
there is a growing body of opinion that evidence of abuse
against animals is a sign of a likelihood that an offender
will be aggressive and violent to human beings, particularly
partners and children.
So as politicians and the media are blaming the usual
suspects for the reported rise in youth violence and gun
crime, academics are pursuing a new line of inquiry and last
week 200 lawyers, academics and others from the police,
prisons and probation service gathered to debate the
evidence.
According to John Schnafer, Professor at George Washington
University Law School: "Social science has documented the
link among domestic violence, child abuse and animal cruelty
in the home for many years but the law has been slow to
respond." Scottish law has for some years adopted a holistic
approach to the protection of vulnerable people and animals.
The Scots' experience shows that battered or abused domestic
partners and children often come from homes where domestic
pets have been mistreated.
Last year the Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science
reported that since the mid1990s awareness of the links had
increased. This resulted in better communication between
social services and animal welfare organisations. The
Government recognised the need for agencies to work together
and to look beyond conventional boundaries in its recent
paper Working Together to Safeguard Children.

A person's disposition to animal abuse can be of crucial
importance at three points of the criminal process. It can
indicate that the abuser is violent towards people so that
protection can be offered to vulnerable adults or children.

Dr Ian Robertson, of Leeds University, has argued that abuse
of animals can be an indication of a predilection to violence
to human beings. But many professionals also argue that the
law should take this into account at the trial itself. The
Criminal Justice Act 2003 provides the means to admit
evidence of a predisposition or tendency to violence at
trial.
Finally, evidence as to animal cruelty could have an impact
on sentencing. With information about a convicted defendant,
a judge can increase sentence if it is in the public's
interest. Last week Professor Martin Wasik, a leading
sentencing expert, suggested that if there is an established
link, such evidence could well be introduced as one of
several factors at the sentencing stage.
So a consensus as to a link on cruelty seems to be emerging.
The key question is how the justice system should act upon
it. The author, a criminal barrister, wrote: Hunting & The
Hare: Offending patterns and criminal profiling of
individuals who hunt with dogs

Tuesday, September 04, 2007 

Vick case stirs debate over value of dogs versus people!

Vick case stirs debate over value of dogs versus people
Posted by the Asbury Park Press
on 09/2/07
BY SUSAN RUSSELL

Post Comseconds, the horrors of the Michael Vick dogfighting scandal seemed crystal clear. Americans know an atrocity when they see one.

Then the competition began. It's people versus animals, went the refrain. Compassion must be rationed. It's either/or.

Hot air from conservatives? Not really. More like a cold wind from the left.

Kindness is a vanishing American virtue -- at least for the chattering classes. It seems the more interest groups there are, the less genuine kindness there is. Perhaps acute specialization breeds selfishness -- only we matter! -- hardening the heart to everyone and everything else.

And so it was that a cadre of liberal talking heads and columnists belittled widespread outrage over dogfighting. Each touted his or her own cause -- and species -- as more deserving of the outrage. A few appeared more outraged by public compassion for dogs than by dogfighting itself. "Mere dogs," they sniffed. "What about people?"

Sandy Kobrin is a regular contributor to Women's eNews, and, presumably, a feminist. Deeply offended, Kobrin wrote: "Beat a woman? Play on. Beat a dog? You're gone. What could possibly account for this bizarre situation? The anti-animal-abuse lobby, meanwhile, is going after Vick with all four paws."

When the least powerful among us are viewed as competitors -- for attention, for compassion, for funds -- we've become very small indeed.

One would think that in a nation that slaughters nearly 10 billion animals a year for food, kills another 30 million a year for amusement and destroys untold millions of unwanted dogs and cats every year, it shouldn't be too trying to give brutalized dogs their day.

Shouldn't the progressive mantra of respect apply not only to chosen groups of people, but also to persecuted animals and the human beings who work to protect them?

If any of the commentators so morbidly offended by the outpouring of sympathy for dogs over people didn't take a sustained stand against athletes beating women, they are hypocrites squared.

Likewise, interests who are usually judgmental and quick to assign blame looked the other way. Dogs? What dogs? According to Vick's apologists, he made a vague "mistake." One columnist wrote that "Michael Vick was crucified" -- even after the football player pleaded guilty. All forgot to mention the tortured dogs.

Such stilted ethics are light years behind humanity's greatest thinkers and philosophers. Pythagoras, Seneca, Plutarch, Da Vinci, Voltaire, Paine, Montaigne, Twain, Tolstoy, Locke, Darwin, Hugo, Zola, Schopenhauer, Einstein and so many others were impassioned advocates for animals, as well as for humans.

"The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man," wrote Charles Darwin. Thomas Edison said, "Nonviolence leads to the highest ethics, which is the goal of all evolution. Until we stop harming all other living beings, we are savages." "I am in favor of animal rights as well as human rights," wrote Abraham Lincoln. "That is the way of a whole human being."

What children, men, women and thousands of pit bulls have in common is that they are daily victims of insensate, burgeoning violence. Given the documented link between violence against animals and violence against humans, is there any clearer sign that the circle of compassion, as Albert Schweitzer called it, must include both?

Humanitarians of all stripes, for all species, must make education inculcating nonviolence and kindness toward humans and animals a priority, in cities where violence against humans, dogfighting and cockfighting flourish, and in rural areas where animal fighting is entrenched.

Authorities say crimes of cruelty are nearing a crisis stage. Behind a Tallahassee, Fla., home last month, police found dozens of starving, wounded pit bulls feared too far gone to be helped. Days before, deputy sheriffs uncovered a mass grave of 28 roosters, cockfighting weapons and $25,000 in cash. In New Jersey, Trenton, parts of Salem County, Paterson and other areas are on the grid.

Until the Vick case, enforcement of animal fighting laws was rare. Now, cruelty enforcement is on the upswing, with new cases breaking every week.

The venality of dogfighting isn't limited to gansta rap or to famous football stars. It cuts across racial lines. A 1998 undercover investigation of dogfighting in the U.S. found that the participants were generally poor, usually rural and "overwhelmingly white."

We know and love dogs. It is their proximity to us that makes them lovable. We don't know the panicked animals forced to endure killing and bleeding floors in slaughterhouses. They are the untouchables, deliberately kept out of sight, out of mind. How many kind, well-meaning people condemned dogfighting, then sat down to a fat, juicy steak from a steer who, given the odds, was skinned alive, and who, to paraphrase Thoreau, held his life by the same tenure we do?

The bottom line: If breeding "man's best friends" to rip each other apart -- to cheers and jeers -- then drowning and electrocuting the broken, bleeding "underperformers" didn't shock the conscience of most, albeit not all, Americans, we'd be in trouble.

Fortunately, most Americans and the media got this one right. The bean counters might ponder the lesson.

Susan Russell, Little Silver, is a lobbyist, researcher and writer on animal issues.

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