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View Poll Results: Do you support animal rights or welfare?
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Animal Rights
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Animal Welfare
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both
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Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
 Originally Posted by elevatethis
So would you hunt people for meat? Lol...obviously not, but the point is, Animal Welfare means you hunt and fish and keep livestock with respect for them, while animal rights mean you treat them the same as you would another human being. It really doesn't make any sense to say you are for both, by my logic at least.
I must tred carefully here.
For human to cause harm or pain to an animal for no other reason that they can is the lowest form of a person one can be.
For a human to take an animals life for food or for medical reasearch is ok in my book. Now for medical research! not to find a better mouse trap or to figure out just how much clorex they can drink before they die. I.E 9500 Billion rats and rabbits suffer and die to cure Polio or Luekemia or MS praise God he sent us rats and rabbits that would carry the burden, insteed of 9500 billion human cases being studied before a cure is found.
When you've got 10,000 people trying to do the same thing, why would you want to be number 10,001? ~ Mark Cuban "for the discerning collector"
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Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
So you are for Animal Welfare because you would prefer to see animals "carry the burden" instead of humans.
Just wanted to clarify, since you said before:
I support animal welfare and rights.
My point is that by the description that Mendel gave of the two, they are mutually exclusive (you can't support both at the same time, it's contradictory).
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Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
Ok then. I'm for animal welfare. 
And had I rather see 9500 billion lab rats and rabbits bred and raised for the reason of medical testing contract some horrid aflection like Polio or MS to find a cure instead of having 9500 billion people suffer through a lifetime of it to find a cure
Yea 100 %
I can say thanks to lab rats for things like the Polio cure so I know my kids want be stuck in crutches for their whole life, or thank cows for not haveing to put one of my kids or me or my wife in the ground because of smallpox. Cancer victims can thank lab animals for Cemo and radation thearpy. AIDs treatments right down to the FLU shot are all animal tested treatments.. I totaly thank them (the animals) that give their lives so I can live a longer, healthier, happier, more porductive life. With all my Heart.
Last edited by Freakie_frog; 01-09-2007 at 07:19 PM.
When you've got 10,000 people trying to do the same thing, why would you want to be number 10,001? ~ Mark Cuban "for the discerning collector"
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
Giving animals rights does not - at least to me - mean giving them the 'same rights as humans' - as someone wittily pointed out you can hardly give an anaconda the right to own property! The degree to which they are given would obviously depend on the species involved as well - an earthworm is not a cat is not a bonobo.
Last edited by kurgan; 01-09-2007 at 09:20 PM.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
 Originally Posted by kurgan
Giving animals rights does not - at least to me - mean giving them the 'same rights as humans' - as someone wittily pointed out you can hardly give an anaconda the right to own property! The degree to which they are given would obviously depend on the species involved as well - an earthworm is not a cat is not a bonobo.
totally agree
I would consider myself an animal rights activist (not a PETA crazy) but I also obviously have pets of my own.
I don't think that animals should have the same rights as us (as previously stated above) but I think that there needs to be some legal protection for them. As long as we take animals captive it is our responsibility to care for them as we would ourselves or our children.
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Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
 Originally Posted by slartibartfast
Thanks for providing this link.
I must admit at first I was very skeptical.
I am always very skeptical of undercover animal rights activists-Primarily because of the "undercover exposure" of allegedly poor care in the Silver Springs Monkeys that was made by Alex Pacheco during the political conception of PETA. For further information see
http://www.animalrights.net/archives...00/000035.html
http://www.nationalreview.com/smithw...0402100912.asp
That being said--from the reviews that I have read of this documentary, etc. this does look like a genuine exposure of neglect and animal torture. Note: I haven't seen the actual footage yet and I don't get HBO currently.
And this wasn't PETA...it was a different group.
A couple of points to consider:
(1) This wasn’t at a lab...this was at a kennel before they go to the lab. Universities lab are constantly inspected.
(2) The universities that continued to buy from this kennel after allegations surfaced did a grave disservice to all biomedical research. Note none of these universities involved (University of Missouri at Columbia, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and Oregon State University) were top notch receivers of NIH funding.
(3) I don’t see anything suggesting this is a widespread problem-maybe it was mentioned in the documentary. This is like going into the worse public school documenting the problems and suggesting all public schools are bad. Or uncovering bad reptile care and saying that all herps should never be keep as pets. While they did uncover animal torture and abuse, their was a phenomenon going on in this part of Missouri that was well-known and rip for investigation—animals had been disappearing for awhile in this state so much so that it had been nick-named the “Steal Me State” by animal welfare groups.
(4) Dogs are not used that much in biomedical research—rodents are by far the most used model organism in research. However, one reason Dogs are useful though because they have kidneys that function similar to ours while rodents do not. An important part of science is argumentation-or the justification of a model system for the in-depth study a phenomenon.
(5) Model organisms-from yeast to monkeys-will be needed for quite some time in research. People who say things like “experiment on the convicts” really have no idea about how modern biomedical sciences progress. You can’t make a convict with knock-out gene with current technology in an ethical way. You’d be making a knock-out son or daughter of a convict. But it is practically feasible to make a knock-out or transgenic mouse to study a cell signaling pathway. You wouldn’t have the advantage of large numbers in humans.
In vitro research is useful, but not all questions can be addressed in vitro.
Computer simulations are only as good as the info you put into them- you get that info by doing research on cells and organisms.
This basic research is important for developing the models that allow pre-clinical and clinical science to investigate fruitful leads. I will take evidence-based western medicine over quack medicine any day (even if it is expensive!)
(6) Ideally, one would hope even the animal rights extremists would serve a purpose in achieving some sort of “compassionate balance” by keeping researchers honest in their welfare practices and considerate in using animals. To a certain extent this is true. Generally, our county seems to work well when both sides have some say and work together for a compromise. This group seems to genuinely uncover a real abuse and weakness in the current system and should be commended.
Other groups are so extreme--they are not rationale and they are willing to murder for their agenda. Some of these groups fund or are terrorists. I’ve heard that Homeland Security puts Eco-terrorism and animal liberation groups as a larger risk than Islamic extremist groups (maybe not in scale of attack, but certainly in frequency of attacks). These extremists serve no greater good in my opinion.
~ 1.0.0 Python regius ~ Wild-type ~
~ 1.0.0 Canis familiaris ~ Blue Italian Greyhound ~
~ 0.0.9 Danio rerio~ Wild-type and Glofish

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BPnet Veteran
Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
In the UK the animal rights extremists are generally worse than your side of the pond.
The regulations re: animal research are significantly stricter in the UK. Research animals are documented from birth onwards making it much much harder for that sort of thing to happen. The flip side however is that there is no possibility for a lab beagle to have a happy retirement as a family pet - they will spend all their life in insitutional care.
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Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
My animals should go on welfare! I am tired of supporting them, the lazy little suckers..!
Wait, that wasn't really funny... ::runs and hides::
-Jen. Back in the hobby after a hiatus!
Ball pythons:
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Registered User
Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
 Originally Posted by Ginevive
My animals should go on welfare! I am tired of supporting them, the lazy little suckers..!
Wait, that wasn't really funny... ::runs and hides::
One of my husband's cousins tried to get his animals on welfare...and claim them on his taxes...he almost got away with it too. :eek:
In the spirit of the quoted post (to which I found tremendously funny) I think that all animals should have the rights to demand welfare.
~Denise~
My pet and critter list......in short form:
38 different tarantula species
8 different scorpion species
0.1.0 MBK
1.0.0 Bull snake
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1.0.0 Black/gray tabby
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1.4.0 Children
Lunacy General, Not Crazy, Just Different
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Registered User
Re: Animal Rights or Animal Welfare?
Hello,
I have recently joined the site and am very excited about it. Anyway to the point.... Mendel, earlier in this post you claimed that human organs such as a kidney have not yet been able to be cloned in most cases you are correct. However a recent scientific discussed how a man, his name escapes me, recently GREW a bladder. what he did is selected several cells from deep inside a regeular human bladder and then he grew them around the mold of a bladder, he eneded up with a fully functioning bladder and had i put into severa people who had malfunctioning bladders alll had increased bladder funcion toa degree
Ty
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