how is this any different from the slaughtering of cows, pigs, chickens for meat? those animals die horrifically also.
I'd like to see a farmer grab a cow and slam her on the ground to beat her to death... These animals are suffering before dying. Very fucking cruel and sad
This falls under the it only matters if you personally care rule.
Nearly everything we want or desire causes some form of cruelty in the world.
Care if you wish and not support the ones that strike home to you, but forget trying to get those that do not care to change their opinions either.
Legal fur farming is just as merciful as killing cows/chickens/pigs etc for meat. In fact, slaughtering animals for meat is more cruel since you can't use injections.
Most of normal fur farm animals are killed through injections or gasing, anyways what you see in that video is obviously wrong but thats not how most of fur farming is done. I'm sure if you wanted to, you could come up with many examples of cows being brutally slaughtered.
f you are familiar with PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), then you are aware of the fact they will do almost anything to protect animals. This year's efforts to save Ohio's deer from the annual statewide gun season has backfired.
For safety's sake, hunters in Ohio are required by law to display at least 400 square inches of hunter's blaze orange on their person when in the woods.
Capitalizing on the fact that hunters do not usually shoot orange, PETA recently bulk purchased blaze orange vests and have been affixing them to live-trapped deer in Youngstown suburbs. According to PETA spokesperson Katie Reese, a total of 405 vests were successfully put into circulation prior to this week, with additional specimens still being caught and vested. Youngtown entrepreneur Guy Lockey, of Guy's Outdoors has spit in the face of PETA by offering rewards for the returned vests this week.
As of today, 308 of the vests had already been recorded as bagged with most of the hunters registering for Mr. Lockey's drawing.
"It's so easy, you can see them coming a mile away" said one first year hunter after checking in his first spike buck. ODNR officials are worried that the poorly thought out plan by PETA might get somebody shot instead of saving the deer. "Hunters have turned their plan upside down, we're just hoping that nobody gets hurt and are hoping that none of the vested animals get tangled in brush" said an unnamed ODNR official. "PETA has really outdone itself this time."
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