71. Animal Ethics: From Today's New York Times
said, "The outside of a horse is good for the inside of a boy." This is as true for the citizens of our cities as it is for young men and women even today.horses are, and have always been, magical: big, strong, beautiful, lithe—and when
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72. Animal Ethics: Turtlenapping
Reform or Abolition?
Horse Slaughter Again
From Today's New York Times
Foie Gras
From the Mailbag
Organic Milk
From Today's New York Times
Grouse Hunting
From Today's New York Times
St Francis Foundation
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2006/08/turtlenapping-shelbie-kidnapped.html - 85.5kb
73. Animal Ethics: Peter Singer Unplugged
in Defense of Liberty
Horse Slaughter Yet Again
Equicide
Horses
Don't Kill the Whale
Fish
From Today's New York Times
Crocodile Hunter
From Today's New York Times
►
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2006/09/peter-singer-unplugged.html - 85.3kb
74. Animal Ethics: Introducing Jonathan Hubbell
Jonathan; maybe he’s a horse person. I like heavy-metal music. Mylan probably likes Lawrence Welk . (Just kidding, Mylan.) The point is, you should not assume that I share Mylan’s or Jonathan’s views, values, beliefs, tastes,
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2006/12/introducing-jonathan-hubbell.html - 89.1kb
75. Animal Ethics: Sophie
Worth. She was born in a horse barn in Red Oak, Texas. I’ve watched Sophie go from a rampaging puppy to a rambunctious middle-aged dog to an old girl who sleeps a lot, walks more slowly, and doesn’t hear as well. But one thing
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2005/01/sophie-i-dont-know-where-time-went-but.html - 86.5kb
76. Animal Ethics: From Today's New York Times
and starvation of wild horses to benefit those who stand to profit from their slaughter.Senator Conrad Burns, Republican of Montana, added language into last year's spending bill allowing certain horses to be auctioned to the highest bidder,
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2005/01/from-todays-new-york-times-to-editor_11.html - 87.5kb
77. Animal Ethics: From Today's New York Times
closing the door after the horse is out of the barn. The only way to protect our food supply is to ban the use of animals as food for other animals. Beef brains and lower intestines are not routinely sold for human consumption, but they are
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2004/01/from-todays-new-york-times.html - 87.9kb
78. Animal Ethics: Vicki Hearne on Animal Rights
very keeping of a dog or a horse or a gerbil or a lion is in and of itself an offense. The more loudly they speak, the less likely they are to be in a rights relation to any given animal, because they are spending so much time in airplanes or
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2004/03/vicki-hearne-on-animal-rights-people.html - 89.2kb
79. Animal Ethics: Confusions and Fallacies About Animals, Part 11
of mine—a cow, a horse, a pig, a chicken, a goat—dies a natural death. May I eat it?I don’t see why not. There are two reasons, in general, to refrain from eating animal flesh. The first—the utilitarian
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2004/06/confusions-and-fallacies-about-animals_21.html - 89.9kb
80. Animal Ethics: From the Oxford English Dictionary, 2d ed.
as are used by man, as a horse, ass, or dog. ) 3. a. Contemptuously or humorously for: a human being who is no better than a brute, or whose animal nature has the ascendancy over his reason; a mere animal. (Cf. similar use of creature. )
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2004/01/from-oxford-english-dictionary-2d-ed.html - 92.8kb