1. How to Do Animal Rights - Dogs: Communication & Control
all your behaviour to your dog, not just you but the entire household, otherwise he will be confused and get worse. Let 'Consistency!' be your motto. Always be consistent!
A word about dominant, aggressive, territorial and feuding dogs.
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/dogs.html - 15.0kb
2. How to Do Animal Rights - Blogger
Rights Collective
All Dog Boots
The Animal Rights Blog
Animal Rights Blog
Animal Ethics
House Rabbit Society Rabbit Center Blog
Dog News
›› To Entries & Home
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/blogger.html - 29.2kb
3. How to Do Animal Rights - Voluntary Worker Abroad
A volunteer drying a lost dog at a temporary animal clinic after Hurricane Katrina. (Photo by Andrea Booher, FEMA Photo Library / Wikimedia Commons .)
Check Bona Fides
How do you check the honesty of an organisation? The
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/i-ch4-20-vol-worker.html - 12.6kb
4. How to Do Animal Rights - Zoophilia
popular beast partners are dogs, horses, cows and sheep, probably because of their prevalence and relatively submissive behaviour as domesticated animals. Zoophilia is from the Greek zoon - animal, and philia - lover.
Illustrations from
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/zoophilia.html - 14.3kb
5. How to Do Animal Rights - Train your cat for traffic
are not so bad.
Have a dog? See the entry dogs - Communication & Control.
›› To Entries & Home
Copyright © Roger Panaman (Ben Isacat), 2008.All
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/cat-traffic-training.html - 10.6kb
6. How to Do Animal Rights - Fur Species
numbers of domestic cats and dogs in Asia are skinned for their pelts.
Table 1. Common Fur-bearers Used by the Fur Trade.
Common Name
Scientific Name
North American Beaver
Castor canadensis
European
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/fur-species.html - 21.2kb
7. How to Do Animal Rights - Painism
in a mouse compared with a dog, or a dog compared with a human - and that the right moral action should be based on abating the pain of individuals who suffer the most.
Painism says:
Pain is all forms of suffering, whether mental or
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/i-ch8-3-painism.html - 13.0kb
8. How to Do Animal Rights - Great Apes
wolf, lion and African wild dog, and our closeness to these predators derives from our shared ecological adaptations. Social-living carnivores and humans have evolved to live in much the same ecological niche: group-living, group-hunting
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/great-apes.html - 11.9kb
9. How to Do Animal Rights - Han means He or She
independent cat.
The dog yawned, stretched, then han got up.
I held out a banana and the monkey ate han.
We are all han. Han means he or she . Han could also stand for it if adopted into English. Computer
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/han.html - 9.1kb
10. How to Do Animal Rights - Richard Martin
Robert FitzGerald, killed a dog, Martin challenged him to a shoot-out and they wounded each other. When asked why he defended animals so utterly, Martin is said to have encapsulated his passion for duelling and his concern for animals with the
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/i-ch6-4-martin.html - 10.7kb