Category Archives: Have You Heard?

VegWeek Pledge!

This is from the Compassion Over Killing (COK) website. Check it out and make the pledge to put the animals, your health, and the environment first next week! It’s a great way to challenge what you thought you knew about food. And if you have any questions about what in the world you eat if you don’t eat meat, just post a question and we’ll answer it!

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Welcome to VegWeek 2012: Take the 7-Day Veg Pledge!

April 23-29, 2012: There are 52 weeks in a year, so why not make at least one of them meat-free? VegWeek is seven-day celebration highlighting the many benefits of choosing vegetarian foods—for our health, the planet, and animals—and thousands of people nationwide are taking the 7-Day Veg Pledge as a fun way to discover new and delicious meat-free meals! Sign up today–and we’ll even send you a Starter Pack loaded with recipes and product coupons.

You’ll be in good company! Several elected representatives, including Md. Senator Jamie Raskin and Md. Delegate Tom Hucker, along with community leaders and media personalities, such as Washington Post columnist Gene Weingarten, are also pledging to go veg–in addition to thousands of others nationwide.

Be sure to check out the dozens of restaurants offering VegWeek specials as well as VegWeek events taking place across the country.

Join in on the fun: Sign up for the 7-Day Veg Pledge now!

What Is VegWeek?

Compassion Over Killing launched the first-ever VegWeek in 2009 in Takoma Park, Maryland (our hometown) thanks to the inspiration of MD Senator Jamie Raskin. Sen. Raskin eagerly signed up as the first person to take our 7-day Veg Pledge—a pledge he’s kept to this day—and VegWeek was officially recognized by our city through a Mayoral Proclamation.

Energized by his new vegetarian diet, which he refers to as “aligning my morals with my menu,” Sen. Raskin has since helped COK expand our VegWeek campaign, first to entire state of Maryland in 2010 then to Virginia, DC, and California in 2011—and now nationwide!

Want to volunteer for VegWeek or host an event in your town? Contact us today!

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The Secret Life of Juan

From NPR. Shakespeare himself could have written this as a tragedy were he alive today. The King’s country is falling into financial ruins. He tells the people to be frugal. He tells leaders to reflect on their own behavior and to be models for the citizens. He stands as the honorary president of the World Wildlife Fund in his monarchy. And then what does he do?? He goes on a $60,000 elephant hunting trip in Botswana. (picture is from previous trip in 2006.) 

But, lo and behold, he breaks his hip during the trip and must explain his injury to the nation he thought he could fool. Animal rights, WWF, and the unemployed, underserved Spanish people are up in arms.  This guy dug himself a whole so deep you could bury a trophy hunted elephant in it.

(And as an interesting secondary plot, his 13-year-old grandson is currently being investigated in an incident during which he “shot himself in the foot.” Ah, the irony.) 

Here is the full story…

 

OPEN SEASON ON SPAIN’S KING AFTER LUXE HUNTING TRIP

by LAUREN FRAYER

For a man used to pomp and paparazzi, King Juan Carlos of Spain looked shaken, emerging from a hospital in Madrid Wednesday after hip surgery.

“I’m very sorry,” he said, blinking into the cameras, sheepish, and leaning on his crutches. “I made a mistake, and it won’t happen again.”

As Spaniards grapple with severe austerity measures and 24 percent unemployment, their king is dealing with a different kind of pain — extreme embarrassment over public outrage upon his return from an elephant hunt in Africa that cost nearly $60,000, or more than twice the average salary in Spain.

And the Spanish public only found out about the trip because he broke his hip — hence the recent surgery — and had to be airlifted home.

The Royal Palace confirmed that this is the first time a Spanish king has ever said he’s sorry — at least publicly — for anything.

But it’s not enough for Rafa Lucia, a social worker smoking in the rain outside a Madrid library. He’s been jobless for months. The government cut his local school’s budget by 30 percent.

And the Royal Palace’s budget?

“They cut just 2 percent. And now this. It’s like, OK, so the government doesn’t cut [their budget], and now he’s spending the money in Africa killing elephants,” Lucia says.

Adding Insult To Injury

Spaniards can’t decide which would be worse — whether their king might have spent public money on his jaunt to Botswana last week, or whether it was paid for by an Arab businessman courting favor, as some reports say. Either way, there are calls for the king’s abdication.

Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad if the king hadn’t recently given a speech calling on Spanish leaders to think about their own behavior and set an example of modesty amid recession. He also said he loses sleep worrying that the unemployment rate among young Spaniards is 50 percent.

Members of the animal-rights group Igualdad Animal protest outside the Madrid hospital where Spanish King Juan Carlos was recovering after hip surgery this week. The king, who went elephant hunting in Africa, is the honorary president of the World Wildlife Fund in Spain.

EnlargeLauren Frayer for NPRMembers of the animal-rights group Igualdad Animal protest outside the Madrid hospital where Spanish King Juan Carlos was recovering after hip surgery this week. The king, who went elephant hunting in Africa, is the honorary president of the World Wildlife Fund in Spain.

Sharon Nuñez, an animal-rights activist, organized a protest outside the king’s hospital this week. Volunteers lined the street with photos of maimed elephants and water buffalo.

“That’s the funny, ironic thing about it — we have someone who’s going out killing elephants, killing animals, and he’s representing an international environmental organization,” Nuñez says.

She’s referring to the fact that the king is the honorary president of the World Wildlife Fund in Spain.

This proved particularly awkward when a snapshot of Juan Carlos began circulating online this week. It shows him posing in front of an elephant he shot dead in Botswana in 2006.

WWF’s conservation director for Spain, Enrique Segovia, says he has requested an audience with the king to discuss whether he’ll keep that position.

“We’ve had many, many complaints from members,” Segovia says. “The image of the king hunting elephants, it’s incongruent with an organization like ours that defends elephants.”

Rough Year For Royals

Spain’s monarchy is mostly symbolic, but well-respected. Juan Carlos was hand-picked by Gen. Francisco Franco to lead Spain before the dictator died in 1975, and the king is credited with easing the country’s transition to democracy.

But college student Roy Alexander Bouzas says times have changed.

“It’s true that old people here in Spain appreciate the work that the king did in the transition,” he says. “But I think we’re now in another time — the transition is the past — and the king has to [make] efforts like the rest of the citizens.”

It’s been a tough year for Spain’s royals. The king’s son-in-law is the subject of a corruption probe. And last week, police began investigating an incident involving the king’s 13-year-old grandson, who recently shot himself in the foot.

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Activism? Or is it the T word?

 

You know all those horrible but eye-opening videos you’ve seen about animal treatment in factory farms? Well it appears that those videos actually lead to “economic hardship” for the enterprises they expose. Hmm, go figure. When Mercy For Animals shows the way Sparboro Farms abuses chicks and chickens, guess what happens? Major purchasers pull their support, regular people hear all about it on Facebook, celebrities begin to speak out, and pretty soon you’ve got a lot less people eating Sparboro eggs.

But instead of hailing Mercy For Animals for doing their regulatory duty for them, the government has suggested that MFA’s undercover videotaping may actually qualify the animal rights organization as terrorists.  At least an FBI document acquired through the FOIA sure suggests that. It was written by an FBI agent and states that actions such as undercover videotaping violate the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act which was supposed to defend against property damage like burning down buildings or freeing entire groups of laboratory animals. One of the accused said, ““It is…sobering to realize the supposedly terroristic activities in question are merely exposing the horrific cruelty of factory farms, educating the public about what goes on behind those closed doors, and openly rescuing a few animals from one of those farms as an act of civil disobedience.”

Indeed, this threat of terrorism charges for undercover videotaping is disturbing to me for two reasons. First, because when an injustice is being done, I feel it is sometimes the duty of the people to speak up against it…namely, when the powers that be will not. If I were to ever see injustice at my workplace, you bet I would try to capture that on tape for evidence. These animals live in disgusting, debilitating conditions; they are injured, neglected and denied any semblance of natural animal behaviors. Then they are often slaughtered in ways that defy regulations not to mention moral decency. When someone delivers evidence of this so that legal and social intervention can happen, while at the same time doing no harm to people or property, I can’t fathom calling them a terrorism. It is standing up for what is right. If we trusted politicians and regulatory agencies to raise their voice for what is good and decent (and thank goodness for those that do!) then we wouldn’t have to be peering through the crack in the wall to see what is really happening behind closed doors.

Secondly, these charges are nothing to take lightly considering the recent, mind-blowing passage of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2012 under which the President can indefinitely detain American citizens without trial. I see the privacy rights of American citizens decreased, while the threat of arrest for demanding more transparency from government and corporations increased, and this is frightening. This is not my area of expertise, but a pattern of chipping away at privacy sure seems obvious when you look at the facts. More and more it seems like the message is: We can watch you, but don’t you dare watch us.

I personally have had my life drastically changed by the kinds of videos put out by Mercy For Animals and PETA. I want to know what I’m eating, supporting, buying into, falling for. In fact, I believe this is my right. My abilities for compassion and for standing up against what I think is wrong have been greatly bolstered by watching atrocities shown in these clips. It’s hard and heartbreaking to find out what is really inside our grocery or shopping bags sometimes but we all have the opportunity to educate ourselves and then change our selections. I wouldn’t want to live in a place where that transformation couldn’t take place.

What do you think about these videos? What do you think about the National Defense Authorization Act and the war on terror? These are interesting times. Let’s talk.

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Occupy Anthem

Pretty gutsy move. The guy sang the same protest song for 45 minutes in front of President Obama and APEC!!

You can watch his video HERE.

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Occupy APEC: Makana, Hawaiian Guitarist, Makes Statement At Wakiki Event 

The Huffington Post    Posted: 11/13/11 04:15 PM ET

A musician took a stand at last night’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation gala, which was attended President Obama and a slew of world leaders.

Hawaiian guitarist Makana, who has performed at the White House, wore a shirt that read ”Occupy With Aloha” and played a song inspired by the Occupy Wall Street protests.

“We’ll occupy the streets, we’ll occupy the courts, we’ll occupy the offices of you, till you do the bidding of the many, not the few,” he sang at the Wakiki event. “The time has come for us to voice our rage.”

The tune, “We Are the Many”, ran for 45 minutes long.

Hawaii locals joined the national movement last month, gathering in Honolulu’s financial district. When the protesters tried to make camp, several were arrested.

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7 Billion and Counting

The arrival of the 7 billionth person on Earth is happening this month! And Jeffrey Sachs says it’s cause for “profound global concern.”  In this article he responds to the questions: What will it take to maintain a planet in which each person has a chance for a full, productive and prosperous life, and in which the planet’s resources are sustained for future generations? How, in short, can we enjoy “sustainable development” on a very crowded planet? See what you think about his strategy and let us know!…

Sachs on CNN: A Huge Task Before Us

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~~~A Wave~~~

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Irvine, CA passes progressive humane law

 

 

“Irvine, California’s City Council passed an unprecedented bill this week banning rodeos and circuses with exotic animals, and the retail sale of dogs and cats. This huge victory for animals passed with a 4–1 vote after nearly 40 supporters, including IDA’s Elephant Campaign Director Catherine Doyle, spoke in favor of the ban.

 

Most dogs sold in pet stores come from puppy mills where dogs are kept in filthy, cramped, inhumane conditions. Animals in circuses suffer terribly from cruel training, painful physical problems from living in semi-trailers and on chains, and sheer boredom. Animals in rodeos are not aggressive naturally – they are domesticated animals who are painfully coerced and injured for the sake of entertainment. IDA applauds the city of Irvine for their compassionate decision. Congratulations to the Irvine activists whose perseverance and hard work made this amazing victory possible. California just got a little safer for animals.”    

                           

   - In Defense of Animals (IDA)


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Occupy Wall Street Facing Eviction?

Unarguably one of the most important movements taking place right now in our nation. Occupy Wall Street has united thousands of people in cities across the country. Now, for the latest development…

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15300491

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