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MY PAGE IS CURRENTLY BEING UPDATED 2009
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environmental issues
hUMAN RIGHTS
animal welfare

How You Can Help

Amnesty International doesn’t just reveal the outrage of human rights abuse but inspires hope for a better world through public action and international solidarity.
We help stop human rights abuses by mobilizing our members and supporters to put pressure on governments, armed groups, companies and intergovernmental bodies
There are many ways you can help us, including making a donation, joining Amnesty International and taking action.
JOIN AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Join Amnesty International and help us build pressure for change - your contribution will make the world of difference.
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Oxfam International is a confederation of 13 like-minded organizations working together and with partners and allies around the world to bring about lasting change.
We work directly with communities and we seek to influence the powerful to ensure that poor people can improve their lives and livelihoods and have a say in decisions that affect them.
Find out how we work with others to end poverty and injustice, from campaigning to responding to emergencies.
We believe that respect for human rights will help lift people out of poverty.
Find out more about Oxfam International.
We strive to do what we say we will do. Read about our core values and operating principles against which we measure ourselves
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MEANWHILE BACK IN WONDERLAND...
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Dogfighting |
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©Huemer/HSUS |
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Victims of dogfighting suffer painful injuries, even death. |
In organized dogfighting, two dogs, usually pit bulls, fight until one or both can't continue. The dogs suffer serious injuries or death in the match.
Often, the owner of the losing dog will shoot or abandon the injured dog to die slowly from injuries.
Organized dogfighting is illegal everywhere in the United States and is a felony in all 50 states. See how your state rates on dogfighting laws. | |






HOW MUCH IS THAT PUPPY IN THE WINDOW...
Puppy mills are mass dog-breeding operations have been around for decades, but they continue to be a problem because unsuspecting consumers keep buying those adorable puppies in the pet store window. Or on some slick Internet site. Or even through an ad in the trusted local newspaper.
Countless rogue puppy traders who keep handbag-sized puppies in appalling conditions have been uncovered.
(GET STUPID) **** puppies for christmas!!! Posted by unregistered - Dogs-and-Puppies
Puppy mills are nothing new. These mass dog-breeding operations have been around for decades. They continue to thrive because they prey on unwitting consumers who are smitten by too-cute-for-words puppies in pet store windows and on fancy websites.
But behind the friendly facade of the local pet shop, the pastoral scenes on a "breeder's" website, or the neighborhood newspaper ad, there often lies a puppy mill. These canine breeding facilities house dogs in shockingly poor conditions.
Life is particularly bad for "breeding stock," dogs who live their entire lives in cages and are continually bred for years, without human companionship and with little hope of ever becoming part of a family. These dogs receive little or no veterinary care and never see a bed, a treat or a toy. After their fertility wanes, breeding animals are commonly killed, abandoned or sold to another mill. The annual result of all this breeding is hundreds of thousands of puppies, many with behavior and/or health problems.
Laws and Order
Because a puppy mill is a business, the facility is designed purely for profit, not for the well-being of dogs. Laws are on the books to provide minimum-care standards for puppy-mill animals, but enforcement has historically been spotty at best. The U.S. Department of Agriculture licenses and inspects "commercial breeding facilities for violations of the Animal Welfare Act; likewise, a handful of states have laws that provide oversight of some breeding operations as well. But puppy mills can successfully navigate around these laws, either by selling directly to consumers (thereby avoiding USDA licensing requirements) or by simply avoiding the reach of law enforcement (with so few USDA inspectors and minor fines, it's easy to stay in business).
Spanish lesson




WARNING DISTURBING PHOTO
I was so blind I could not see your paradise is not for me
Remedios Varo
1955 Useless Science or the Alchemist
Purchases of these P&G products provide the funding for their animal testing, and encourage P&G to carry on regardless...
But by boycotting these products, you will apply pressure against P&G’s animal testing cruelty...
...
The welfare and dignity of animals rests in your hands.




More Uncaged sites:




Contact us: Uncaged Campaigns, 5th Floor, Alliance House, 9 Leopold Street, Sheffield, S1 2GY, UK +44 (0) 114 272 2220 info@uncaged.co.uk




KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
The Theory And Practice Of Hell
What's the real story behind the glossy commercials for Kentucky Fried Chicken? Is it a wholesome tale of happiness and health? Or a catalogue of cruelty and suffering which Kentucky Fried Chicken don't want us to know? Hidden behind the ads, the victims of Kentucky Fried Chicken suffer lives of degradation and distress. The natural needs and instincts of the birds are ignored altogether. Right from the hatchery until slaughter, they are subjected to a succession of cruelties. The chickens undergo mutilation, crowding, injuries, diseases, debeaking, forced molting, antibiotics, ammonia burn and heat stress. The combs and toes of breeding chickens are cut off. The birds are constantly exposed to "the excremental assault".
Chicken feathers, guts, and waste water, which normally need to be discarded during processing, are routinely "recycled" back to the layer and broiler houses as feed. Industry experts believe that along with unclean slaughtering and processing techniques, this enforced cannibalism is leading to the rampant salmonella epidemic in US poultry plants.
Abuse doesn't stop there. In the name of "poultry science", horrific experiments are performed on live animals in university departments. Meanwhile, male chicks born to laying hens by killed en masse. The chicks are weeded out by "chick-pullers". The young birds die by being suffocated, gassed or ground up while still alive. "Poultry processing plants" are factories of cruelty and killing on a scale it is difficult to comprehend. From the perspective of the distressed animal, life really is "an eternal Treblinka".
The victims of our last finger-lickin' meal are first hung alive and upside-down on metal hooks. They then pass through an apparatus which "ideally" kills them quickly by removing the head with a whirring blade; or alternatively they perish, agonisingly, by immersion in an electrical-shock tank. The doomed birds can see their fate and that of their fellows as they approach the killing station. They are distraught and terrified.
So-called "redskins" are those chickens which - on the conveyer belts to their deaths - missed not only the brine-filled electrified stunning trough, but the knife that was to cut their throats. Their deaths occurred in the scald tank where feathers are loosened before plucking. Industry throws aside piles of them every day.
One has to ask the question: does the nice taste of dead animal flesh morally outweigh the frightful cruelties our meat-eating habits entail? This isn't an ethical discussion Kentucky Fried Chicken is keen to promote.

The Chicken Out! Team Compassion in World Farming
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dionarch is against all animal fur sold on

Mink Fur Farming
Due to campaigns by anti-fur groups including CAFT-UK the farming of animals 'solely or primarily for their fur' was banned in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland from 1st January 2003. Meanwhile, millions of animals continue to be killed around the world for their fur. The majority of these animals are mink, raised on fur factory farms.
Mink are wild solitary animals, whose life on fur farms is reduced by the farmer to a walking fur coat. Fur farms totally suppress any natural behavioural instincts of the mink, resulting in self-mutilation, cannibalism and psychotic behaviour.
Recommended cages sizes for mink are 38cm wide by 30.5cm high by 61cm long, but many are considerably smaller. Some have likened the floor area of the cage to the size of two shoe-boxes.These are bare wire cages, usually but not always with a wooden nest box (rarely with any straw bedding) attached. The partially webbed feet of the mink mean that walking on the coarse, wide mesh is uncomfortable; not that they can actually walk far. Cages witnesses by CAFT-UK investigators are not even high enough to allow the prisoners to stand fully upright, which mink do to sniff the air to scent prey or danger.
Mink are not domesticated animals. Mink farming was introduced to Britain in 1929, and no captive line is older than 100 years old. Compare this to the 12,000 years of domestication of the dog, or 7,000 years for the chicken, and 4,000 for the pig, and you can see why the Government's Farm Animal Welfare Council said it was "particularly concerned about the keeping of what are essentially wild animals in small barren cages." Access to water is essential for the well being of mink. In the wild they have a territory of up to 4km along a waterway, using it both for hunting prey such as fish and water fowl, and for travelling. They spend 60% of their active time in water. Access to water plays an important part in the life and development of mink. The only water mink get on fur farms is drinking water, through a rubber pipe. Even this most basic of requirements is denied by the farmers whose only motive is profit. The fur trade even has the audacity to deny that these semi-aquatic creatures need access to swimming water. Robert Morgan of the British Fur Trade Association has been quoted as saying "If mink have access to swimming water, then they would get wet and probably get cold and die". In 1989 the Farm Animal Welfare Council pointed out that account should be taken of the need for environmental enrichment such as adequate access to water, a call echoed by the British Veterinary Association in 1995. During a CAFT-UK investigation at a West Yorkshire mink farm, our investigators witnessed two mink that had escaped from their cages playing in a pool of water caused by a leak in the water pipe, doing what comes naturally to these semi-aquatic animals.
Mink are solitary creatures. In the wild they strongly defend their territories and only come into contact with other mink in order to mate. On the fur farm each mink is imprisoned in a row of cages. Each row may hold over 100 cages, two rows to a shed. These solitary animals are forced to live in close sight, smell and sound of thousands of others. They are often forced to live several to a cage.
It is no surprise that these conditions force the animals into displaying unnatural patterns of behaviour. As with animals confined in zoos, farmed mink display signs of psychotic behaviour, 'madness'. Virtually all the mink's activity in the wild is dictated by its requirements for survival and reproduction. Caged mink show all four of the recognised types of abnormal behaviour, such as self - injury and stereotyped behaviour (constant pacing or circling of the cage, gnawing bars, etc). Wild mink exhibit none of these. Self-mutilation is common, and according to a Government report into fur farming in the Netherlands, 10-20% of farmed mink cause injury to themselves, such as pelt and tail biting and others have put this figure as high as 30%. Cannibalism is another common behaviour, and has been caught on film by CAFT-UK investigators.
Mink are mated in early March and litters of kits are usually born in the first two weeks of May. The level of infertility on British mink farms is high, and females reach their highest fertility at 2-3 years old. Kit mortality is high, with 9-12% being born dead or dying within 3 weeks of birth.
By November or December, when the young's winter coat is fully grown, they are pelted at just 7 or 8 months of age. The most common methods of killing mink in Britain were by gassing with carbon monoxide from a vehicle exhaust and gassing with carbon dioxide. The British Fur Trade Association (BFTA) claimed that their members do not use gas to kill mink. Yet at that time only one British mink farm did not use gas and CAFT-UK investigators filmed the gassing of mink at a Newcastle farm owned by a then director of the BFTA!
Back in 1989 the Farm Animal Welfare Council examined mink and fox fur farming. So concerned were they by the conditions they found that they issued a press statement to point out their disapproved of the farming. They slammed the farms for failing to "satisfy some of the most basic criteria which it has identified for protecting the welfare of farm animals".



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Pamela Anderson Save the Seals
Animal Collective Save the Seals
Brody Jenner Save the Seals
Christian Serratos Save the Seals
Grace Park Save the Seals
Hannah Teter Save the Seals
Holly Madison Save the Seals
Jayde Nicole Save the Seals
Jennie Garth Save the Seals
Jorja Fox Save the Seals
Kelly Osbourne Save the Seals
Levi Leipheimer Save the Seals
Lucy Davis Save the Seals
Natalie Dreyfuss Save the Seals
Owain Yeoman Save the Seals
Perez Hilton Save the Seals
Rachael Leigh Cook Save the Seals
Steve-O Save the Seals
'Sugar' Shane Mosley Save the Seals
Tricia Helfer Save the Seals
Mario Barth's Ink Not Mink Print PSA
Karina Smirnoff: I'd Rather Dance Naked Than Wear Fur
Nia Long: I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur
The Women of Bluewater Comics: We'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur
The Women of Rick's Cabaret Would Rather Go Topless
Joel Gibb of The Hidden Cameras: Canada's Club Scene Sucks
Mark Ronson: If You Wouldn't Wear Your Dog …
Missy Higgins: Would You Wear Your Dog?
Mario: Ink Not Mink
Peaches: Canada's Club Scene Sucks
Jamie Bamber: Bare Skin Not Bear Skin
Carey Hart: Ink Not Mink Print PSA
Khloe Kardashian: I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur Print PSA
Avoid Fashion That Makes Your Skin Crawl - Crocodile Print PSA
Avoid Fashion That Makes Your Skin Crawl - Snake Print PSA
Danity Kane: We'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur
Be Comfortable In Your Own Skin (Amanda Beard)
Joanna Krupa: I’d Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur (1)
Joanna Krupa: I’d Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur (2)
 Joanna Krupa: I’d Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur (3)
Eva Mendes: Fur? I’d Rather Go Naked
Roselyn Sanchez: I’d Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur
Jenna Jameson: Pleather Yourself
 Ami James: Ink Not Mink
 Natalie Imbruglia: "Try Telling Him..."
Friday Night Lights' Aimee Teagarden: If You Wouldn't Wear Your Dog...
Steve-O: I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur
 Holly Madison: "I always Fake It"
Pamela Anderson
Steve-O: Ink Not Mink
Donate Your Furs
Des'ree
Kim Basinger: Beauty is not About Wearing Someone Else's Coat
Gena Lee Nolin Exotic Skins
Boss Models
Bill Maher/Ellen Degeneres
"If You Wouldn't Wear Your Dog ..." (Goran Visnjic)
Fernanda Tavares
Jenna Morasca
Simple Plan- Anti-Fur Ad
Persia White- Here’s the Rest of Your Coat Ad
Melissa Rivers- Fake It ... Ad
Todd Oldham and Kathy Najimy
Christy Turlington
Yana Booth- Bare Skin, Not Bear Skin Ad
Donna Karan’s Killer Look
Dear Beyoncé
Be Comfortable in Your Own Skin (Vanessa Olivarez)
"Hands Off The Buns!" (Imogen Bailey)
Ink, Not Mink!
"Rather Go Naked" (Jenna Morasca/Ethan Zohn)
Kristoff St. John— "Be Comfortable in Your Own Skin"
Amy Sedaris— "What Becomes a Loser Most"
Dennis Rodman— "Think Ink, Not Mink"
David Cross— "Wear Your Own Fur"
Anna Nicole Smith— "Gentleman Prefer Fur-Free Blondes"
Charlize Theron— "If You Wouldn’t Wear Your Dog..."
Simon Cowell
J Lo
Peaches
Garbage’s Shirley Manson/‘Here’s the Rest of Your Fur Coat’
Surya Bonaly: Stop the Canadian Seal Hunt
Surya Bonaly: Stop the Canadian Seal Hunt (bloody)
Playboy’s Holly Madison
Drill Sergeant & Playboy ModelMichelle Manhart
 Annalise Braakensiek: Save The Sheep
Leather=Dead Skin
Dominique Swain
These Babies Miss Their Mothers
Sophie Ellis Bextor: Here's the Rest of Your Fur Coat
Nicholas Gonzalez
Christina Applegate: Fur-get Me Not
Mola
 Only 29 More...
Charlotte Ross
 Charlotte Ross
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Learn about Climate-Friendly Travel with WWF


Dancing bears
WSPA-funded research suggests approximately 150 bears in India are currently living out their days dragged from village to village ‘dancing’ for audiences.
This number had dropped from 400 in recent years, but the remaining bears are enduring a lifetime of physical and mental distress. Illegally poached as cubs, even their most basic needs, such as adequate nutrition, are not met.
Each young bear will suffer the piercing of their nose or palate. A rope is passed through the raw wound. Tugging on it remains an effective means of control throughout the bear’s life.
Years of conditioning allows owners to make adult bears ‘dance’ on command.
Illegal and inhumane, yet the dancing continues
The Kalandars – India’s traditional dancing bear owners – use the bear shows to support large family groups. The profession is historically passed from father to son, so other opportunities are not often considered.
Public campaigning against the practice has significantly reduced the number of dancing bears on India’s main tourist trails. But the semi-nomadic Kalandars have taken their shows to more receptive areas.
The capture and keeping of bears is prohibited, yet dancing bear shows find rural audiences. People in these areas, where animal welfare education is rare, are unlikely to report dancing bears to the authorities.
Forestry officials may be prevented from enforcing animal protection laws due to a lack of facilities to house confiscated animals.
Stamping out cruelty
WSPA is working with the Wildlife Trust of India to tackle both the root and result of the problem, by:
- Running welfare awareness programs to educate the public
- Running law enforcement activities to prevent cubs being poached
- Striving to ensure that suitable lifetime care is provided for confiscated bears
- Helping the bear owners to find new, cruelty-free ways to earn a living.
Please support us. With your help, WSPA can prevent more animals from living miserable and painful lives.
Visit the Integrated Sloth Bear Conservation and Welfare Project website for more information about WSPA’s work with WTI.



An international problem
Until recently, bears were also used in Europe for this purpose. Bulgaria was the last country in Europe to use dancing bears. As in India, the occupation was a tradition of nomadic tribes, in this case the Roma (Gypsies). The last three dancing bears in Bulgaria were surrendered to a sanctuary in June 2007. However, in spite of the European law against the trade, several incidents were reported in Spain in 2007.
The dancing bears of India are primarily under the control of a nomadic people known as the Kalandar (or Qalandar), who come from a line of tribesmen who once entertained northern India’s Mughal emperors with trained-animal acts. Thus, working with animals for entertainment is the traditional livelihood of the tribe, whose people also have sidelines selling animal parts as medicines (see the Advocacy for Animals article) and good-luck charms.
The Kalandar are recognized by the Indian government as an economically deprived tribe, although efforts to help them have been few. Investigators from international animal-welfare organizations are working with them and are helping them obtain better economic conditions. Programs have been established by cooperating national and international organizations—such as Wildlife S.O.S. and International Animal Rescue—that are aimed at helping the bears and helping the Kalandar. They seek to persuade the people that a livelihood that uses animals for entertainment is not sustainable. For example, the acquisition of a bear is a source of pride and prestige, but bears are expensive and the mortality rate is high, especially in the first three years of a bear’s life.
Treatment of Bears
The bears are poached from the wild as cubs, an act that often necessitates killing the mother first. Some cubs, traumatized, die of shock. Others succumb to neglect or dehydration. Survivors are sold to trainers, who use sticks and physical threats to teach the orphaned cubs to stand, move on their hind legs, and perform other tricks. The cubs’ teeth are often knocked out or broken for the safety of humans; their nails are clipped short or removed (both of which are painful to bears); and a hot poker or piece of metal is run through the snout or lip to make a permanent hole through which a rope is anchored to control the bear. All of this is done without anesthesia. The trainers make the bears move by pulling on the rope, which causes great pain, and beating the bears if they do not obey. The owners, being poor themselves, cannot feed the bears a nutritionally sound diet even if they want to, and many bears lose their fur or suffer from cataracts and go blind.
The behavior that audiences are encouraged to interpret as “dancing” is the product of aversive training. The Roma training method involved greasing the bears’ paws and having them stand on hot plates while music played; the bears hopped on the plates to avoid the burning pain, which became associated in their minds with the sound of the music. Eventually, just hearing the music caused the bears to repeat this “dancing” movement.
Efforts to stop the exploitation of bears
Bear dancing was outlawed by the Indian government in 1972. The practice has continued, however, partly because the Kalandar had no alternative and also because, until the early 21st century, there was no place to put confiscated bears; enforcement was therefore somewhat pointless. Special licenses were granted to the Kalandar so they could continue, while a bear sanctuary at Agra was created by Wildlife SOS.
Although it is difficult to abandon long-held cultural and economic practices, the Kalandar have been willing to do so, provided that they are given the help they need to make a new start. In exchange for the bears, the Kalandar are given job training and equipment for alternative occupations, such as welding and the manufacture of useful products such as soap and incense. Some run small stalls and shops.
The first group of some two dozen rescued bears went to the Agra sanctuary in 2002. Since then more than 465 bears have gone to that facility and two others—one in Bannerghatta, near Bangalore, and another in Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh state. The Agra Bear Rescue Facility is managed by Wildlife S.O.S., under the overall supervision of the Uttar Pradesh Forest Department. International Animal Rescue is committed to providing long-term funding for the running costs of the sanctuary.
The rescued bears are first quarantined and given medical care. Once they are healthy enough to undergo the surgery, the ropes are removed from their noses—which are usually badly infected and bleeding. The sanctuaries provide environmental stimulation as well, including dens and swimming pools in which to cool off.
When dancing bears are saved from indentured servitude to regain their health and freedom, both the bears and their rescuers experience great relief. Alan Knight, CEO of International Animal Rescue, says, “We started with six frightened and traumatized bears…. When we removed the ropes their first reaction was bewilderment and fear. There will always be a special place in our hearts for those first bears we took in. Since those early days we have expanded the sanctuary and now we have more than 100 acres where the bears can roam freely and leave behind the pain and trauma of their lives on the streets.”


Christmas card message....
Thinking of sending Christmas cards? Think again!
Email cards save trees
What my aunt wrote in my Birthday card !
Fortunately there was only one tree cut down to make this card but the orangutans didn’t mind one bit because they just moved to another tree. Oops! Then that tree was cut down for someone else’s birthday but the orangutans just moved to another tree because they were just gypsies at heart. They didn’t know that they were going to be extinct. The moral of this story is STOP CUTTING DOWN THIER F***ING TREES!!! Because the whole human race will become EXTINCT!
please send on to as many people as possible! thanks


Paradise not for me
Indonesia exported 556,000 retic python skins, and 71,000 blood and short-tail python skins. Most of these snakes pass through specialised snake slaughter houses in Sumatra and Borneo. The snakes are killed primarily for skins but also harvested for meat and gall bladders to supply the ethnic Chinese populations. Despite possible claims, these are not captive bred for the market, who could economically raise a python to adult size and then slaughter it for its skin, meat and bile, and expect to improve on their investment. Pythons are often skinned alive, the same for crocodiles, apparently the skin is easier to remove.







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100% Genuine Python Snake Skin Leather Trouser Belt
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The March Hare ...
Harehunting has the same purpose as the now illegal bloodsports of dogfighting, bear baiting and badger baiting to provide amusement for a minority of human beings. Hares are hunted by packs of three different types of hounds some 100 packs of beagles, 10 packs of bassets and 40 packs of harriers. The beagles and bassets are followed on foot, harriers on horseback.
The harehunting season starts in September/October and ends in March/April so as not to interfere with harvesting, sowing etc. As with all hunting with dogs, the victim is beaten not by speed, but stamina. Superior speed gives the hare the initial advantage, however the superior stamina of the hounds wears the hare down to exhaustion.
Hunting enthusiasts judge a pack of dogs to be 'well-bred' if they take 60-90 minutes to run the hare to exhaustion and kill it. Any less time is reckoned to detract from the 'fun' of the hunt.
When first hunted and fresh, hares run in large circles, reluctant to leave their home range, but as they tire they take a straighter line. The hare is then simply overwhelmed by the hounds and killed.
These simple facts clearly prove that unnecessary suffering is inflicted on the hare solely for the purpose of providing amusement.

Remedios Varo
1957 Creation of the Birds



The tide may have turned on the shark - it has become the hunted, rather than the hunter, in parts of the Pacific Ocean.
Situated off the coast of Ecuador, the group of islands making up Galapagos National Park has been attracting nature lovers worldwide.
But the ecological balance of one of the planet's most cherished nature reserves has come under serious threat as another species is being pushed to the verge of extinction - sharks.
These waters have become infested by new unwelcome killers.
Illegal fishing companies are making a lucrative business out of hunting sharks and selling their fins.
Fins are sold throughout Asia, often ending up in the popular dish of shark fin soup.
As supply struggles to keep up with demand - hunters have been scouring the waters in their droves.
Mr Eliecer Cruz, Director of Galapagos National Park, said the unethical hunting of sharks had become a profitable venture.
Illegal fishing ships, some coming from as far away as Japan, catch the sharks in nets.
They cut the animal's dorsal, pectoral and tail fins as soon as they are pulled on board the boat.
Fishermen later dump the bleeding animals back into the ocean to die slowly.
The hunting has put the survival of some species under threat, but, with one pound of shark fin selling for up to US$80, there's little incentive for illegal fisherman to abandon their trade.



Leonora Carrington
Bird Bath 1974
Oil Pollution and Birds
- Oil may escape from ships through accidents or through deliberate dumping.
- Every year, more than 300 000 birds are killed by oil off the south coast of the island of Newfoundland alone.
- Many oiled birds that wash ashore must be humanely killed, because cleaning oiled birds is largely ineffective. The wrecked super-tanker, spewing a black tide of oil, has become a powerful symbol of ocean pollution and of humans’ destruction of the natural environment. So have the dying seabirds that strand on the beach, black with oil. Once the bird is touched by oil, its body heat drains away through the “tear” in its protective plumage. The bird tries to maintain its body temperature by burning its energy reserves stored as body fat, but these are soon exhausted. It may also try to save itself by spending even more energy in search of food. In this pursuit it is handicapped by its extra burden of soaked feathers and weakness, and the exhausted bird will soon die. In the cold waters around the coasts of Canada, hypothermia is usually the cause of death.
Did you know that plastic trash kills 1 million seabirds every year, as well as 100,000 sea animals like whales, turtles and seals? Plastic bags take up to 1000 years to decompose, just so a human can have a few minutes of convenience.
 
RECYCLE
5 WAYS YOU CAN REDUCE YOUR GLOBAL FOOTPRINT
1. UNPLUG YOUR MOBILE PHONE CHARGER, EVEN WHEN YOUR PHONE IS NOT CONNECTED IT STILL USES ENERGY.
2. DON'T LEAVE THE TAP RUNNING WHEN BRUSHING YOUR TEETH.
3. WHEN SHOPPING DON'T COLLECT A PLASTIC CARRIER BAG WITH EACH PURCHASE. WHEN GROCERY SHOPPING BUY LOOSE FRUIT AND VEGETABLES THAT HAVE BEEN GROWN CLOSE TO HOME SO NO AIR MILES WERE USED FOR TRANSPORTATION AND TAKE YOUR OWN REUSEABLE TOTE BAGS.
4. SWITCH OFF LIGHTS AND ELECTRICAL GADGETS; COMPUTER, CD PLAYER, GAMES CONSOLE WHEN NOT IN USE. IF YOU LEAVE YOUR COMPUTER FOR A SHORT WHILE JUST SWITCH OFF THE SCREEN, THIS IS NOW COMMON PRACTISE AT THE WORK PLACE OFFICE WHEN IN MEETINGS. SWITCH OFF THE T.V. AT THE SOCKET AT NIGHT AS WHEN JUST TURNED OFF IT STILL USES ENERGY.
5. RECYCLE EVERYTHING; PAPER, GLASS, PLASTIC AND TINS. IF YOU DON'T HAVE A RECYCLE TRUCK TO PICK THEM UP IN YOUR AREA YOUR LOCAL LARGE SUPERMARKET WILL HAVE RECYCLE BINS PROVIDED. USE FOOD WASTE AS COMPOST IN YOUR GARDEN, THE COUNCIL ARE NOW SUPPLYING FOOD WASTE CONTAINERS FOR APPARTMENTS.
OTHER WAYS YOU CAN DO YOUR BIT :)
DON'T FILL THE KETTLE FULL WHEN MAKING A HOT DRINK. TURN YOUR WASHING MACHINE DIAL TO 30 DEGREES USING ANY WASHING DETERGENT. YOU CAN ALSO APPLY TO YOUR WATER COMPANY FOR A FREE BAG THAT FITS IN YOUR SYSTEM SO LESS WATER IS USED WHEN FLUSHED OR SIMPLY ADD A BRICK. HAVE A SAND TIMER IN YOUR BATHROOM SHOWER AND TRY AND KEEP UP WITH A CERTAIN TIME LIMIT. BUY RECYCLED TOILET PAPER, ANDREX STATE THEY PLANT BABY TREES AFTER DEMOLISHING HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF FORESTS BUT HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE FOR A TREE TO GROW! USE LASTING ENERGY EFFICIENT ECO LIGHT BULBS.

Take Another Look at Vintage Clothes
High-end hand-me-downs (the smart set calls them vintage) are more ecologically sound than new clothes. Why? Buying a shirt the second time around means you avoid consuming all the energy used in producing and shipping a new one and, therefore, the carbon emissions associated with it. Every item of clothing you own has an impact on the environment. Some synthetic textiles are made with petroleum products. Cotton accounts for less than 3% of farmed land globally but consumes about a quarter of the pesticides. One quick way to change your duds: invite friends over for a closet swap, to which everyone brings a few items they want to trade. It's easy on the environment—and your pocketbook.

Check the Label
You wouldn't buy a car without knowing its gas mileage. Why not do the same when choosing energy-efficient ovens or even supermarkets and hotels? Energy Star, a rating system by the Environmental Protection Agency, will help you find them. Approved products can be pricier, but they cost less to power. Commercial buildings account for nearly 18% of U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions, but those with the Energy Star label consume 35% less energy than the average. By using Energy Star appliances at home, consumers can reduce their utility bill as much as 30%.
Shut off your computer
A screen saver is not an energy saver. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, 75% of all the electricity consumed in the home is standby power used to keep electronics running when those TVs, DVDs, computers, monitors and stereos are "off." The average desktop computer, not including the monitor, consumes from 60 to 250 watts a day. Compared with a machine left on 24/7, a computer that is in use four hours a day and turned off the rest of the time would save you about $70 a year. The carbon impact would be even greater. Shutting it off would reduce the machine's CO2 emissions 83%, to just 63 kg a year.
Top 10 Things You Can Do to Reduce Global Warming
Burning fossil fuels such as natural gas, coal, oil and gasoline raises the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and carbon dioxide is a major contributor to the greenhouse effect and global warning. You can help to reduce the demand for fossil fuels, which in turn reduces global warming, by using energy more wisely. Here are 10 simple actions you can take to help reduce global warming.
1. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Do your part to reduce waste by choosing reusable products instead of disposables. Buying products with minimal packaging (including the economy size when that makes sense for you) will help to reduce waste. And whenever you can, recycle paper, plastic , newspaper, glass and aluminum cans. If there isn’t a recycle programme at your workplace, school, or in your community, ask about starting one. By recycling half of your household waste, you can save 2,400 pounds of carbon dioxide annually.
2. Use Less Heat and Air Conditioning
Adding insulation to your walls and attic, and installing weather stripping or caulking around doors and windows can lower your heating costs more than 25 percent, by reducing the amount of energy you need to heat and cool your home. Turn down the heat while you’re sleeping at night or away during the day, and keep temperatures moderate at all times. Setting your thermostat just 2 degrees lower in winter and higher in summer could save about 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide each year.
3. CHANGE A LIGHTBULB
Wherever practical, replace regular light bulbs with compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs. Replacing just one 60-watt incandescent light bulb with a CFL will save you $30 over the life of the bulb. CFLs also last 10 times longer than incandescent bulbs, use two-thirds less energy, and give off 70 percent less heat. If every U.S. family replaced one regular light bulb with a CFL, it would eliminate 90 billion pounds of greenhouse gases, the same as taking 7.5 million cars off the road.
4. DRIVE LESS DRIVE SMARTLess driving means fewer emissions. Besides saving gasoline, walking and biking are great forms of exercise. Explore your community’s mass transit system, and check out options for carpooling to work or school. When you do drive, make sure your car is running efficiently. For example, keeping your tires properly inflated can improve your gas mileage by more than 3 percent. Every gallon of gas you save not only helps your budget, it also keeps 20 pounds of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.
5. Buy Energy-Efficient ProductsWhen it’s time to buy a new car, choose one that offers good gas mileage. Home appliances now come in a range of energy-efficient models, and compact florescent bulbs are designed to provide more natural-looking light while using far less energy than standard light bulbs.
Avoid products that come with excess packaging, especially molded plastic and other packaging that can't be recycled. If you reduce your household garbage by 10 percent, you can save 1,200 pounds of carbon dioxide annually.
6. Use Less Hot WaterSet your water heater at 120 degrees to save energy, and wrap it in an insulating blanket if it is more than 5 years old. Buy low-flow showerheads to save hot water and about 350 pounds of carbon dioxide yearly. Wash your clothes in warm or cold water to reduce your use of hot water and the energy required to produce it. That change alone can save at least 500 pounds of carbon dioxide annually in most households. Use the energy-saving settings on your dishwasher and let the dishes air-dry. Or don't use a dishwasher!
7. Use the "Off" SwitchSave electricity and reduce global warming by turning off lights when you leave a room, and using only as much light as you need. And remember to turn off your television, video player, stereo and computer when you're not using them. It’s also a good idea to turn off the water when you’re not using it. While brushing your teeth, shampooing the dog or washing your car, turn off the water until you actually need it for rinsing. You’ll reduce your water bill and help to conserve a vital resource.
8. PLANT A TREE
If you have the means to plant a tree, start digging. During photosynthesis, trees and other plants absorb carbon dioxide and give off oxygen. They are an integral part of the natural atmospheric exchange cycle here on Earth, but there are too few of them to fully counter the increases in carbon dioxide caused by automobile traffic, manufacturing and other human activities. A single tree will absorb approximately one ton of carbon dioxide during its lifetime.
9. GET A REPORT CARD FROM YOUR UTILITY COMPANYMany utility companies provide free home energy audits to help consumers identify areas in their homes that may not be energy efficient. In addition, many utility companies offer rebate programs to help pay for the cost of energy-efficient upgrades.
10. Encourage Others to Conserve

Share information about recycling and energy conservation with your friends, neighbors and co-workers, and take opportunities to encourage public officials to establish programs and policies that are good for the environment.
These 10 steps will take you a long way toward reducing your energy use and your monthly budget. And less energy use means less dependence on the fossil fuels that create greenhouse gases and contribute to global warming.


The Disappearing Rainforests
- We are losing Earth's greatest biological treasures just as we are beginning to appreciate their true value. Rainforests once covered 14% of the earth's land surface; now they cover a mere 6% and experts estimate that the last remaining rainforests could be consumed in less than 40 years.
better late than never...

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Polar bear 'extinct within 100 years'
The bears face pollution and climate threats
The polar bear could be driven to extinction by global warming within 100 years, warns an ecology expert. The animal, which relies on sea ice to catch seals, is already starting to suffer the effects of climate changes in areas such as Hudson Bay in Canada.
Scientists say Arctic sea ice is melting at a rate of up to 9% per decade. Arctic summers could be ice-free by mid-century.
Dr Andrew Derocher, of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, has used the data to assess the impact on the Arctic's top predator.
Top carnivore
He believes the polar bear could disappear in the wild by the end of the century unless the pace of global warming slows.
He told BBC News Online: "Polar bears are a species whose whole life history is dependent on having sea ice.
"As the sea ice changes in distribution and pattern we can expect this to have fundamental changes on the ecology of polar bears.
"As the sea ice disappears, so will the polar bears."
Polar bears are uniquely adapted to survival in the Arctic. They are the world's largest land predator, feeding mainly on seals.
They use the sea ice as a floating platform to catch prey and they travel across it on their way to their dens.
British polar expert Dr Peter Wadhams of the University of Cambridge says the bear faces a gloomy future unless it is able to change its habits.
"It could be that a polar bear could adapt to a new habitat and adopt habits like the brown bear in Alaska which hunts salmon in streams and other small animals on land," he said.
Fragile ecology
Scientists believe that Ursus maritimus, the "sea bear", evolved about 200,000 years ago from brown bear ancestors.
Whether it can "change its spots" and behave more like a brown bear is another matter.
Lynn Rosentrater, climate scientist in the WWF International Arctic Programme, thinks it unlikely.
There have been cases of polar bears scavenging in bins for food in summer, she said, but the animals need seal fat to get through the winter.
"In the absence of sea ice the whole basis of polar bear ecology ceases to exist," she explained.
Polar bears are currently found in Arctic regions of Alaska, Canada, Russia, Greenland and Norway.
Populations in southern limits such as Hudson Bay are at most risk of dying out.
Bears stand most chance of surviving, in isolated groups, in the western Arctic or the Canadian archipelago.
AS THE WORLD FALLS DOWN...
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Top 10 Things You Can Do to Reduce Global Warming


Burning fossil fuels such as natural gas, coal, oil and gasoline raises the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and carbon dioxide is a major contributor to the greenhouse effect and global warming.
You can help to reduce the demand for fossil fuels, which in turn reduces global warming, by using energy more wisely. Here are 10 simple actions you can take to help reduce global warming.
1. Reduce, Reuse, RecycleDo your part to reduce waste by choosing reusable products instead of disposables. Buying products with minimal packaging (including the economy size when that makes sense for you) will help to reduce waste. And whenever you can, recycle paper, plastic, newspaper, glass and aluminum cans. If there isn't a recycling program at your workplace, school, or in your community, ask about starting one. By recycling half of your household waste, you can save 2,400 pounds of carbon dioxide annually.
2. Use Less Heat and Air ConditioningAdding insulation to your walls and attic, and installing weather stripping or caulking around doors and windows can lower your heating costs more than 25 percent, by reducing the amount of energy you need to heat and cool your home.
Turn down the heat while you're sleeping at night or away during the day, and keep temperatures moderate at all times. Setting your thermostat just 2 degrees lower in winter and higher in summer could save about 2,000 pounds of carbon dioxide each year.
Wherever practical, replace regular light bulbs with compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs. Replacing just one 60-watt incandescent light bulb with a CFL will save you $30 over the life of the bulb. CFLs also last 10 times longer than incandescent bulbs, use two-thirds less energy, and give off 70 percent less heat.
If every U.S. family replaced one regular light bulb with a CFL, it would eliminate 90 billion pounds of greenhouse gases, the same as taking 7.5 million cars off the road.
Less driving means fewer emissions. Besides saving gasoline, walking and biking are great forms of exercise. Explore your community mass transit system, and check out options for carpooling to work or school.
When you do drive, make sure your car is running efficiently. For example, keeping your tires properly inflated can improve your gas mileage by more than 3 percent. Every gallon of gas you save not only helps your budget, it also keeps 20 pounds of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.
5. Buy Energy-Efficient ProductsWhen it's time to buy a new car, choose one that offers good gas mileage. Home appliances now come in a range of energy-efficient models, and compact florescent bulbs are designed to provide more natural-looking light while using far less energy than standard light bulbs.
Avoid products that come with excess packaging, especially molded plastic and other packaging that can't be recycled. If you reduce your household garbage by 10 percent, you can save 1,200 pounds of carbon dioxide annually.
6. Use Less Hot WaterSet your water heater at 120 degrees to save energy, and wrap it in an insulating blanket if it is more than 5 years old. Buy low-flow showerheads to save hot water and about 350 pounds of carbon dioxide yearly. Wash your clothes in warm or cold water to reduce your use of hot water and the energy required to produce it. That change alone can save at least 500 pounds of carbon dioxide annually in most households. Use the energy-saving settings on your dishwasher and let the dishes air-dry.
7. Use the "Off" SwitchSave electricity and reduce global warming by turning off lights when you leave a room, and using only as much light as you need. And remember to turn off your television, video player, stereo and computer when you're not using them.
It's also a good idea to turn off the water when you're not using it. While brushing your teeth, shampooing the dog or washing your car, turn off the water until you actually need it for rinsing. You'll reduce your water bill and help to conserve a vital resource.
If you have the means to plant a tree, start digging. During photosynthesis, trees and other plants absorb carbon dioxide and give off oxygen. They are an integral part of the natural atmospheric exchange cycle here on Earth, but there are too few of them to fully counter the increases in carbon dioxide caused by automobile traffic, manufacturing and other human activities. A single tree will absorb approximately one ton of carbon dioxide during its lifetime.
Many utility companies provide free home energy audits to help consumers identify areas in their homes that may not be energy efficient. In addition, many utility companies offer rebate programs to help pay for the cost of energy-efficient upgrades.
10. Encourage Others to Conserve
Share information about recycling and energy conservation with your friends, neighbors and co-workers, and take opportunities to encourage public officials to establish programs and policies that are good for the environment.
These 10 steps will take you a long way toward reducing your energy use and your monthly budget. And less energy use means less dependence on the fossil fuels that create greenhouse gases and contribute to global warming.




![[Picture]](http://www.madonna-online.ch/m-online/videography/express-yourself/pix/express-yourself_100.jpg)
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IF WE EACH MAKE A SMALL EFFORT WE CAN ALL MAKE A HUGE DIFFERENCE
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created and inspired by the record 'What You Waiting For' by Gwen Stefani 2007
dionarch 2009

PLEASE NOTE:
I DO NOT SUPPORT VIOLENCE OR INTERROGATION ON ANY MEDICAL STAFF MEMBERS. 'MY SHOW' IS PEACEFUL AND SWAYS TOWARDS FASHION, COSMETIC AND IMAGE. I WANT TO SHOW A HUMANE PATHWAY FOR ANIMAL KIND.
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