Animals
by
Eleanor White | 04.22.2012
Read about a unique way to brighten your day and help deserving animals at the same time.
Believe it or not, there are kindly people in this world who conscientiously rescue earthworms who become stranded on pavement.
Once the rain stops, these little friends of the planet, who can't see, usually die a long, painful death by being sun- baked, or at the least, by thirst. Readers who might like to enjoy the good feelings which come from helping an animal in pain may be interested in this short essay on how to help these little folks:
http://www.randomcollection.info/ewrescue.pdf
by
John Fitzgerald | 12.09.2008
Some thoughts on the challenges involved in taking on animal-baiting activities in Ireland
I am an Irish anti-blood sports campaigner and my book Bad Hare Days is generating a lot of controversy, not unexpected given the long running debate on the ethics of live hare coursing in Ireland. I can accept criticism, but not the bullying and the blind unreasoning hatred that my legitimate opposition to this so-called sport has elicited from some coursing fans
My book was NOT written to drive coursing fans wild, or to split families and divide communities, as one critic has accused me of doing. I have received phone calls from defenders of hare coursing threatening all manner of unpleasantness!
by
Valerie Williams | 12.04.2008
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) just moved a step closer to allowing companies to create genetically engineered animals. The FDA is proposing to allow the creation of animals that will be used to produce medicine, organs for transplant, meat or genetically engineered pets; and experiment subjects.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) just moved a step closer to allowing companies to create genetically engineered animals. The FDA is proposing to allow the creation of animals that will be used to produce medicine, organs for transplant, meat or genetically engineered pets; and experiment subjects.
Canadian author Margaret Atwood wrote about many of these same possibilities in her best-selling and starkly apocalyptic book – Oryx and Crake. It seems that in 2003, Atwood’s book made more waves and garnered more headlines than the recent FDA’s public forum requesting input on their proposed Draft Guidance for Industry: Regulation of genetically engineered animals containing heritable rDNA constructs.