DANS LE PASSE, IL Y AVAIT UN CERTAIN RESPECT DES ANIMAUX.DU MOINS ON LES EPARGANIT CAR ILS REPRESENTAIENT UNE CERTAINE VALEUR FINANCIERE.. ACTUELLEMENT ET DE PLUS EN PLUS, CE QUI COMPTE POUR LES ELEVEURS ET AUTRES MARCHANDS DE SOUFFRANCE C' EST LA RAPIDITE ET LE MOINS DE COUTS DE MAIN D' OEUVRE POSSIBLE DONC VOILA CE QUE L' ON FAIT ENDURER AUX LAPINS ANGORAS..
MERITENT ILS CELA??
MERCI DE SIGNER ET DE PARTAGER CAR L' INFORMATION EST LA CLEF DE LA SOLUTION...
VOIR ICI AVEC VIDEO
After watching this video, you'll never buy angora again.
The undercover footage, shot by PETA Asia, reveals routine cruelty
to angora rabbits, whose long, soft fur is often used in sweaters and
accessories. The investigator filmed workers who were violently ripping
the fur from the animals' sensitive skin as they screamed at the top of
their lungs in pain. After this terrifying and barbaric ordeal, which
the rabbits endure every three months, many of them appeared to go into severe shock. After two to five years, those who have survived are hung upside down, their throats are slit, and their carcasses are sold.
Rabbits who have their fur cut or sheared also suffer: During the
cutting process, their front and back legs are tightly tethered—a
terrifying experience for any prey animal—and the sharp cutting tools
inevitably wound them as they struggle desperately to escape.
ET POUR LA LAINE MERINOS CE N' EST GUERE MIEUX..
VOIR ICI
Sheep are gentle individuals who, like all animals, feel pain, fear,
and loneliness. But because there’s a market for their fleece and skins,
they’re treated as nothing more than wool-producing machines.
If they were left alone and not genetically manipulated, sheep would
grow just enough wool to protect themselves from temperature extremes.
The fleece provides them with effective insulation against both cold and
heat.
Shearers are usually paid by volume, not by the hour, which
encourages fast work without any regard for the welfare of the sheep.
This hasty and careless shearing leads to frequent injuries, and workers
use a needle and thread to sew the worst wounds shut—without any pain
relief. Strips of skin—and even teats, tails, and ears—are often cut or
ripped off during shearing.
A PETA investigation of more than 30 shearing sheds in the U.S. and
Australia uncovered rampant abuse. Shearers were caught punching,
kicking, and stomping on sheep, in addition to hitting them in the face
with electric clippers and standing on their heads, necks, and hind
limbs. One shearer was seen beating a lamb in the head with a hammer.
Another even used a sheep’s body to wipe the sheep’s own urine off the
floor. And yet another shearer repeatedly twisted and bent a sheep’s
neck, breaking it.
In Australia, where more than 50 percent of the world’s merino
wool—which is used in products ranging from clothing to
carpets—originates, lambs are forced to endure a gruesome procedure
called “mulesing,” in which huge chunks of skin are cut from the animals’ backsides, often without any painkillers.
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