Campaign to save Namibian seals supported by both economy and compassion - 4 Sep 2011  
email to friend  Manda questa pagina ad un amico   Se volete aggiungere questo video nel vostro blog o sulla vostra
Home Page personale, cliccate il seguente link per copiare il codice sorgente  copiare il codice sorgente   Stampa

Campaign to save Namibian seals supported by both economy and compassion.
A new study jointly commissioned by animal welfare organizations Bont voor Dieren (BvD), Humane Society International (HSI), Respect for Animals (RFA), and the World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) has found that even in terms of financial value, seals are worth much more alive than slaughtered.

Comparing the most recently available statistics from 2008, the report titled, “The economies of seal hunting and seal watching in Namibia,” states that seal watching generated US$2 million in direct tourism, while the cruel hunt and killing of some 85,000 animals produced only US$513,000.

Calling for a complete ban on the country's ruthless seal hunting industry, WSPA celebrity ambassador and vegetarian singer-songwriter Leona Lewis, said, “No price would ever be high enough to justify the killing of these harmless animals. This country has so much natural beauty to offer tourists. Why allow (such a) brutal practice to tarnish its reputation forever?”

Our heartfelt appreciation, World Society for the Protection of Animals, Ambassador Leona Lewis, othercaring organizations and individuals for your noble endeavors to safeguard the precious seal co-inhabitants.

With sorrow for the loss of innocent lives, we pray for an end to all slaughter as humans live in peaceful coexistence and respect for every fellow being on Earth. Speaking during a press conference in Cancún, Mexico, Supreme Master Ching Hai offered additional spiritual insight into how the love from animals like the precious seals helps sustain human life on our planet.

Supreme Master Ching Hai: All the animals can talk to us, telepathically, inside. If we love them, they correspond with us. They are very lovely, very intelligent, very noble, and very, very forgiving. The birds can give us spiritual blessing. Same with dogs, cats, ducks, chickens, rabbits, horses, cows, elephants, whales, sharks, seals, etc.

The animals are here to help to bless and balance the planet with loving energy so that we still can have time to be awakened and save our world. So, the more we protect them, the more we protect ourselves.
http://bikyamasr.com/41047/namibias-seals-better-off-alive/comment-page-1/
http://www.economist.com.na/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24076:to-hunt-or-to-preserve&catid=586:headlines
http://www.looktothestars.org/news/6876-leona-lewis-wants-seal-hunting-stopped-in-namibia  

Extra News
In Iowa, USA, the devastating western corn rootworm has been spreading on Monsanto’s genetically modified corn, despite it having been specially engineered for resistance, thus prompting fears of a superbug and questions about the safety of GMO crops.

http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2011/08/30/the-biggest-threat-to-monsanto.aspx
http://www.france24.com/en/20110830-gmo-corn-falls-prey-bugs-it-was-supposed-thwart

In an effort to restore horses that had become extinct in the wild, 12 tarpans, whose origins date back to prehistoric times, are being reintroduced in Bulgaria's Rhodope mountains through a project supported by the Dutch organization New Thracian Gold.

http://www.france24.com/en/20110831-tarpan-wild-horses-be-reintroduced-bulgaria
http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=131631

As temperatures continue to surpass 100 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius) in parts of the southern US, climate experts reported on September 1, 2011 that the effects of prolonged drought are intensifying and moving east, with indications that the conditions could persist into next year or even longer.

http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/drought-intensifies-in-us-south-no-end-in-sight
http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/climate-weather/stories/drought-intensifies-in-the-south-no-end-in-sight