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STOP ANIMAL CRUELTY
Testing on Animals is Fundamentally Wrong: UK’s National Anti-Vivisection Society - P2/2
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The images
in the following program
are very sensitive
and may be
as disturbing to viewers
as they were to us.
However,
we have to show the truth
about cruelty to animals.
Today’s
Stop Animal Cruelty
program features
the conclusion
of a two-part series
on the sickening practice
of using animals in
laboratory experiments.
Sadly, testing on animals
occurs in the cosmetics,
defense, pharmaceutical,
and a number of
other industries.
It is estimated
that globally 100 million
animals die needlessly
each year in experiments.
The National
Anti-Vivisection Society,
the world’s first
organization to campaign
against the practice,
was founded in 1875
by the great British
humanitarian
Frances Power Cobbe,
who published leaflets
and articles opposing
experimentation
and gained the support of
many prominent figures
of her day.
The current Chief Executive
of the organization,
Ms. Jan Creamer,
recently spoke with
Supreme Master
Television
about the ghastly nature
of animal testing and
why animal-free research
is superior in all respects.
On last week’s program
we learned that
countries around the world
are increasingly moving
toward non-animal based
testing methods
in medical research.
Ms. Creamer now addresses
related developments
in academia.
Animals can be used
in dissections
and demonstrations
for students and
a whole range of things;
really, completely
unjustified.
There is much that can be
learned from books,
(Yes) computers,
studying knowledge
that we already have.
Certainly
there’s never any excuse
to use animals in education.
Luckily, in the UK,
in schools we’ve had a ban
on the use of animals
for A-level dissection
for many, many years,
so this was
an early achievement
where we were able to
explain to the school
examination boards
that for GCSE
(General Certificate
of Secondary Education)
and O-level and A-level
as they were,
that it wasn’t necessary
for students
to be cutting up animals
in order to
study life sciences.
At the university level
we still have some use of
animals in demonstrations,
but also the introduction
of computer programs
and new technologies
have replaced that
in many, many areas.
And that’s something
where you do now have
teachers and lecturers
in universities
who are familiar with
the new ways of teaching,
the new technologies and
so they are more willing
to introduce them.
The so-called
product safety testing
done on animals
is appalling
and the experiments are
indescribably inhumane.
What are
the physical problems
that animals develop
when they go through
these experiments?
It can be a whole range
of distressing effects
depending on
the experiments,
for example,
some of the primates
were being forced to
drink a product every day,
and this is a system
called gavage dosing
where you force a tube
down an animal’s throat
and you pump the product
into their stomach
every day.
And in that range of tests
that we exposed
the animals to
they were suffering
a whole range of
severe side effects.
They were so distressed
that some of them
were chewing off fingers
(Oh, dear)
and things like that.
They were scratching
at their skin
and they were being sick.
They were salivating
and some of the animals,
when they were strapped
into their chairs,
were actually suffering
rectal prolapse.
As a result of the stress
that’s commonly known
in monkeys in laboratories,
if they’re stressed
enough there
then they prolapse.
Some of the monkeys in
some of those experiments
died and the post mortem
revealed that
they had blocked
and blackened lungs
so they must
have suffered terribly
before they died.
There is no doubt
that the whole point of
animal experimentation
is that the animals
will suffer.
I mean, that is
acknowledged. Yes)
There is no way of
conducting an experiment
if you’re going to force
feed an animal a product
until they are poisoned
by that product
or until you see some
kind of adverse effect.
Luckily the poisoning
to death experiments
have been phased out
over the years
and in principle now,
the idea is that
the animals shouldn’t
be poisoned to death,
just until you see
a poisoning effect.
So slow death, effectively?
Whichever way
you look at it
that animal is going to
suffer and suffer terribly.
A more recent form
of unconscionable
animal abuse
is genetic manipulation.
Ms. Creamer shares
her views about
this disturbing procedure.
Genetic modifications
of animals, whether
it’s cloning, experiments,
whether it is other types
of genetic modifications,
all of those experiments
cause extreme suffering,
and that’s the area of
animal research which is
growing very, very fast.
I mean in the last 10 years,
those animals have lept
in numbers
I think the last
government statistics,
it was over a million
genetically modified
animals were used.
And genetic modification
of animals is a whole range
of different types of work.
Some of
the genetic modification
is where a gene is either
added or knocked out and
the animals can be used
for what they call
bio-farming, Right)
which is where they try
to produce a drug either
from the animals’ milk
or from their blood.
So they change
the animal’s gene
so they’re
producing products that
we want to use in a drug.
And so in some ways
they want to get that out
and it could be
it comes out in their milk
or it comes out
in their blood, and
we then use it for people.
Other forms
of genetic modification
are where they’re trying
to use animals to produce
spare parts for people,
spare organs.
When we return,
we’ll learn more about
the genetic modification
of animals
from Jan Creamer.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
You’re watching
Stop Animal Cruelty
featuring Jan Creamer,
Chief Executive
of the National
Anti-Vivisection Society,
who will now
explain more about
the heartlessness
inherent in the practice
of genetically modifying
animals.
Genetically modified
animals, 90% of them
have to be killed.
If you are implanting,
if you’re making
a change to an egg
and implanting it
into another animal,
not all of those eggs
will have the genes
that you want.
And only 10%
of the animals
that are born as a result
of genetic manipulation
have the required gene.
So you’re killing 90%
of the animals
that you’re producing.
And those statistics
haven’t really improved
in the last few years.
The other problems
that genetically modified
animals have
is that they’re subjected
to repeated surgery
for collection of the eggs
from the donor animals,
and then
you manipulate the eggs
and then
you re-implant them;
that’s another surgery
into the recipient animal.
So, it’s repeated surgeries.
They’re also finding
the animals have
all kinds of other problems;
they can be mutated,
they can have
other health problems
when they’re born,
they have
higher birth weights,
making it,
difficult for the females
to give birth.
A whole range of
medical problems
are associated with that.
In addition to that,
the animals that are used
in production of
genetically modified
animals, they have to
live in isolation,
in little plastic boxes.
And so they’re kept
in an environmentally
barren state,
where there is nothing
to stimulate them,
nothing to interest them,
(That’s very sad.)
very, very poor conditions.
Humans and animals are
fundamentally different
in terms of physiology
and none of us can imagine
visiting a veterinarian
if we are ill and
need medical treatment.
It is similarly
unfathomable to expect
animal experimentation
can give us
scientifically valid results
when testing for safety
of a drug
or any other product.
Unfortunately, with
animal experimentation,
because it’s been around
for 100 years or so,
and people didn’t look at
the actual results
we are getting
from animal research,
the issue was,
“Well, okay, we need
to test something;
what should we test it on?
Well we won’t test it
on people; we’ll test it
on a different species.”
And it’s taken really
all of these years
for us to see the
fundamental differences
between ourselves
and other animals,
and the fact that
if you test something
on an animal
in a laboratory,
you are not going to know
how that might affect
people in the real world.
There was an example,
a few years ago,
of an experimental drug,
TGN1412, and
this was in a laboratory
in North London (UK),
and it was given
to human volunteers,
who suffered horrific,
life-threatening side effects.
And this was the story
where some
of the newspapers said
that the swelling
in their heads
was so great
that one of the patients
was referred to
as the “elephant man”
and they suffered
permanent damage
to their bodies.
And this was from
an experimental drug,
which had been given
to laboratory primates
in doses 500 times
stronger than the doses
(Terrible.) given to
the human volunteers,
to no effect.
So 500 times stronger
it was given
to laboratory primates,
no effect, and they gave
a much smaller dose
to the human volunteers
and it had
devastating side effects.
And the worst
of that particular story
was that we already have
a safer, non-animal method
that could have been used
and saved those people
those horrific side effects,
which they’re going
to suffer from
for the rest of their lives.
We have a system
called micro-dosing,
where you give
tiny, tiny amounts
of a substance
to a human volunteer,
and then you analyze it
with accelerator
mass spectrometry,
which is a system
that is so precise in the way
that it can analyze things,
that it can analyze a drop
in the ocean of something.
So it is very, very refined,
very, very precise.
And that could
have been used
instead of these primates
and those people
would not have suffered
those side effects.
Absolutely tragic,
(Very tragic!) it’s tragic.
What is your message
or advice to the public
about vivisection?
The key message about
animal experimentation
is that millions of animals
suffer and die in the most
horrendous circumstances
in laboratories,
not only in the UK
but all over the world
and there is something
we can do to stop it.
We can stop it
by only buying
from companies that
don’t test their products
on animals.
And we can stop it by
writing to governments
and our members
of parliament and
telling them that we want
animal experiments
stopped and
that we want advanced,
non-animal methods
used instead.
So we can have both things;
we can have safe products
on the market (Yes)
that don’t damage people
and the environment,
but we don’t have to
make animals suffer
for that, we can use
advanced technology
to replace the use
of animals in research.
We are deeply grateful
to you Ms. Jan Creamer,
and all the staff
and volunteers
of the National
Anti-Vivisection Society
for informing us about
the horrendous world
of animal testing and
how we can help end it.
Besides writing
to government officials
and avoiding
animal-tested products,
please choose
the loving and kind
organic vegan diet
as it is free
of animal-products
and thus involves
no animal suffering.
For more details
on the National
Anti-Vivisection Society,
please visit
www.navs.org.uk
Thank you for joining us
on this edition of
Stop Animal Cruelty.
Next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
coming up after
Noteworthy News.
May all God’s beings
flourish together
in love and joy.
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