Tag Archives: animal cruelty

Flour Power

 

Since last week, it’s been impossible to escape the news of Kim Kardashian’s encounter with a mysterious “flour bomber” who doused her during the launch of her new fragrance in Los Angeles.

In case you missed it, you can check out the footage here:

Kim Kardashian was allegedly targeted because of her unrepentant love of fur.

I’m not sure what everyone is so shocked about. This brazen form of activism goes back ages. Its objective is to publicly shame the target. Gay activists have been glitter bombing anti-gay figures for years, and a pie in the face is the oldest trick in the book.

What is far more shocking, are the comments made by Ms. Kardashian’s sister, Khloe, who, when discussing the incident, stated, “I don’t condone violence and bullying and what happened last Thursday was just that.”

Is she kidding?

Either her moral universe is completely upside down, or she knows nothing about where the real violence and bullying occur in this story: on fur farms.

Take a look at this video Martha Stewart recently recorded:

After watching these images, who in their right mind would entertain Ms. Kardashian’s comments as anything but rubbish? I’m sure rabbits being skinned alive would instead beg for a dousing of flour. And as far as bullying, I don’t think there’s any question that these animals are terrorized mercilessly. When juxtaposed with reality, her words seem downright obscene.

Khloe Kardashian herself is fur free, yet she has defended her sister’s wearing of fur as a personal choice. But it certainly isn’t a victimless choice. And in pitting her sister’s views against that of the alleged flour bomber, she ignorantly leaves the most important party out of the discussion: the animals.

It takes on average 40 animals to make one fur coat. Not for warmth, not for survival – for vanity. I wonder how many it will take before the Kardashians realize it’s just wrong.

 

An Orwellian Makeover for America’s Factory Farms? (VIDEO)

In 1906, Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle was published, igniting a national firestorm. The horrors that Sinclair’s book depicted inside our country’s beef industry led to such an uproar that Congress was forced to take action, passing the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 (the latter led to the creation of the FDA).

Since then, animal rights activists have conducted countless undercover investigations, carrying on the tradition that Sinclair started, exposing American consumers to the cruel truth behind how the animals they eat become their food.

Now, the animal agriculture industry is fighting back with a nuclear salvo.

In the past couple months, three states: Iowa, Florida, and Minnesota, have introduced legislation that would make it illegal for undercover investigators to obtain employment and shoot video inside farming facilities.

The language in these bills is so far-reaching that even possessing or showing a video from inside these farms would be against the law. The Minnesota effort, in particular, doesn’t just bar investigators from farms; it would also extend criminal repercussions for footage taken inside pet shops, laboratories, shelters, and even veterinary offices.

Should America be concerned? You’re damned right it should.

Take, for example, this undercover investigation released just last week by the animal advocacy group Mercy For Animals. Conducted inside the E6 Cattle Co. in Hart, Texas, the undercover investigator’s gruesome footage revealed the following:

  • Workers bludgeoning calves in their skulls with pickaxes and hammers – often involving 5 to 6 blows, sometimes more – before rendering the animals unconscious
  • Beaten calves, still alive and conscious, thrown onto dead piles
  • Workers kicking downed calves in the head, and standing on their necks and ribs
  • Calves confined to squalid hutches, thick with manure and urine buildup, and barely large enough for the calves to turn around or fully extend their legs
  • Horrifying injuries and afflictions, including open sores, swollen joints and severed hooves
  • Ill, injured and dying calves denied medical care
  • The budding horns of calves burned out their skulls without painkillers

Here’s the video, in case you’d like to see this for yourself:

Orwellian laws making these kinds of exposés illegal reek of guilt and deny Americans access to crucial information. If big Ag has nothing to hide, transparency should not only be legal, it should be welcome.