http://www.azarticles.net/animal-testing-support-brands-not-tested-on-animals/
AZ Articles. 24 December 2010.
Animal Testing – Support Brands Not Tested on Animals
In 1988, I chose to spend an evening viewing Victor
Schonfeld’s “The Animals Film.” This was a strange and
revelatory experience. Sitting in front of a small screen, the
history of animal exploitation flickered before my eyes. From
the first steps in the 1930's when farm animals were crowded
indoors for reasons other than winter, to dog and cock
fighting, bear baiting, fox hunting and hare coursing, to name
but a few. I already knew of this ? who doesn’t ? but I wasn’t
prepared for one of the most disturbing examples of humanities
grim cruelty toward animals, vivisection. Until then, I had an
image of science as a dynamic, progressive, frontier-expanding
activity, and of its practitioners as dedicated teams of
rational, open-minded professionals whose motivation was
highly moral and whose concern was to benefit humanity. Much
of the evidence presented in this film suggested quite the
contrary, with the main beneficiary of these tests being the
company profit margin.
It is not difficult to understand why animals are treated so
indifferently in a society where the powerful minority holds
the majority in similar contempt. What is hard is to break the
circle of unthinking cruelty, and this can only be done as
people begin to question the accepted values of our way of
life and the grim fact of our endemic destructiveness. Here,
as with other conflicts, we must build our conceptual bridges
with the resources of our age. Puzzling and agonizing though
these clashes often are, we know we must somehow deal with
them by working out; how we should ideally think about the
world and relate to animals.
The way we think about the world has a fundamental impact on
decisions concerning the treatment of animals and our
relationship with them. Given the importance of this, it is
somewhat surprising to contemplate that the majority of people
never question the way they think about the world. In many
cases the world is a place where everything is ‘natural’ and
‘inevitable.’ We seem to have an astonishing ability to close
our eyes to the truth, to live in a world of delusions and
make-believe. These characteristics, shared to a greater or
lesser extent by all of us, have helped to create a sick
planet and a great deal of suffering to animals.
If everybody showed respect and had compassion for the
nonhuman world, the earth would then undoubtedly become a more
balanced and healthier place to live. Furthermore, if people
maintain that compassion they will automatically free
themselves from their mental patterns of ignorance. Knowing
what is beneficial to yourself and others, and being able to
do it, is wisdom, which cuts through our fundamental
ignorance. Indeed, “The greatest knowledge we can posses,
Socrates maintained, the only knowledge that matters a damn,
is the awareness of our boundless, fathomless ignorance.”
Essentially, what needs to be done is not that particularly
difficult, it is just a matter of a simple turn-around in
attitude. Just because the way we think about animals has been
inoculated culturally (and not programmed into us genetically
as those who take part in blood sports occasionally claim),
does not mean the disease is not treatable. If changed
attitudes then lead not only changes in our personal lives but
also to policy changes at the corporate and government level,
indeed we have cause for hope. As civilisations advance, the
trend must always be toward increasing humanity and
compassion, and deceasing cruelty and exploitation.
People need to educate themselves about vivisection and pass
on this information to friends and family. It is only our
ignorance on the issue that perpetuates this cruel and
barbaric practice. Something can always be done if the will of
the majority dictates it. You can find out more about
vivisection from any of the following organisations: British
Union for the Abolition of Vivisection; Dr Hadwen Trust;
Doctors and Lawyers for Responsible Medicine; Fund for the
Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments; National
Anti-Vivisection Society; People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals; The Humane Research Trust; Uncaged. There is also a
selection of informative short videos on You Tube, just enter
vivisection or animal testing/experimentation.
One of the most effective ways of turning changed attitudes
into positive, concrete actions is by buying products not
tested on animals. The grim fact is that all too many
companies still test their final products and ingredients on
live animals. Buying products that are cruelty free
demonstrates to those companies that continue to test that you
will not be supporting them. Nowadays, it’s very easy to find
products not tested on animals and these can easily be found
on the internet (i.e. Caring Consumer, Go Cruelty Free,
Leaping Bunny, Uncaged, etc), in whole-food and ‘alternative’
shops, and increasingly in some supermarkets (i.e. all Co-op
own brands are not tested on animals).
Unlike so many other animal abuses, the issue of using animals
in product testing is one that ultimately rests with
consumers. Reliance on animal testing methods for cosmetic and
household products will continue unless concerned citizens
speak out with their purchasing power. By making informed
humane choices and encouraging others to do the same,
individuals can push for an end to product testing and stop
the needless suffering of countless animals each year.
Laboratory animals do not have a voice, so we must use our
purchasing power to speak out for them.
Stephen Knight is the webmaster of Volunteer Latin America and
the main contributor to the Latin Lounge.