11. How to Do Animal Rights - Brains: Milestones of Understanding
a few are recorded here) bear in mind the pain and suffering endured by vivisected animals – and vivisected humans until human vivisection was banned - especially before pain killers were discovered in the 19th century.
Left to
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12. How to Do Animal Rights - Human Superiority
are). From their position, a bear and an eagle would reject human capabilities as purposeless. From the perspective of a bear, strength and a good nose are everything. Without sharp vision and swiftness, an eagle would perish.
Another common
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13. How to Do Animal Rights - Subject of a Life
expression, it may not bear up to examination too closely. We may still appreciate many good ideas that are good generally but difficult in detail.
›› To Entries & Home
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14. How to Do Animal Rights - Animal Statistics
tonnes
Fur-bearers
Farmed mink: 30,000,000+Farmed fox: 5,000,000+Wild fur-bearers: millions
Experimental Animals
41,000,000 to 100,000,000
Interpreting Statistics
Statistics always need
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15. How to Do Animal Rights - Campaigning
animals.
The fur-bearing animals, eg rabbits, racoons, mink, cats.
Farming fur-bearers.
Traps & trapping wild fur-bearers.
Numbers of pelts traded internationally.
The fashion industry.
The leather industry: cattle, snakes and
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16. How to Do Animal Rights - Factory Farming
in the 1960's, bringing to bear the same tools of production: specialised breeding, indoor housing, excrement control, disease control, mutilation, environmental automation, and so on.
Brief Glossary of Factory Farming
By-products -
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17. How to Do Animal Rights - Fur Trapping
small weasel to the large bear. Legholds are relatively cheap and portable and they all work in much the same way. They have two steel jaws backed by heavy springs which snap shut on a foot or leg when an animal steps onto the release mechanism
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