These are some picyures of animals that have been used for animal experiments.
This makes me sick. I cannot belive someone could be so heartless.
Beware some picture's are graphic.
![]()




These are some picyures of animals that have been used for animal experiments.
This makes me sick. I cannot belive someone could be so heartless.
Beware some picture's are graphic.
![]()
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




Poor dog.Again. Why? :'(
![]()
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




"There will come a day when such men as myself will view the slaughter of innocent creatures as horrible a crime as the murder of his fellow man. Our task must be to free ourselves by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and its beauty". Albert Einstein
"If we are extremists, then we are not ashamed of it, the conditions that our people suffer are extreme and an extreme illness cannot be cured by moderate medicine". Malcolm X
"For the animal shall not be measured by man. In a world older and more complete than ours, they move finished and complete, gifted with extensions of the senses we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They are not brethren, they are not underlings, they are other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of life and time, fellow prisoners of the splendour and travail of the Earth". Henry Beston
"He who is cruel to animals becomes hard also in his dealings with men. We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals." Immanuel Kant
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support
Ack.. This is very disgusting. I'm against animal experiments most definitely... But maybe just a link to some sites would be best? I normally have a pretty strong stomach, but these pics make me extremely nauseas.




Every year in the UK well over two million animals are subjected to experiments "likely to cause pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm." (As the Government describes them).
An estimated 9 million animals gassed or decapitated annually because they are deemed 'surplus to requirements' by the vivisection industry. These figures describe the horrific scale of suffering and death in British laboratories.
The situation worldwide is almost too appalling to contemplate, But what the cold statistics hide is the fact that each one of those 11.6 million animals was a warm, living, feeling individual.
These animals have been deprived of the chance to live their lives in the way they were meant to: in family and social groups, tending to their young, and fulfilling their basic needs. They can never understand why they are being made to suffer.
They do not deserve to be locked in cages, and have their whole lives twisted and stolen by vivisectors. Every experiment they are subjected to is a crime against these animals. We must never, ever forget that animal experimentation means the suffering and destruction of sensitive, individual creatures. Once a life is taken, there is no way to make amends.
Liberation is dedicated to protecting these animals. Our intensive efforts are educating the public about the reality of vivisection. Our pressure on companies and governments is forcing them to take notice of the respect that animals are due, and respond to the public's growing demand for an end to the abuse of animals. We are now starting to make historic progress on behalf of animals in laboratories. But we are faced with an immense uphill struggle. The barbaric tradition of vivisection is deeply ingrained in many areas of 'science'.
To make matters worse, the new technology of genetic engineering threatens to inflict more pain and death of animals. What the future holds for animals, ultimately depends on us. For the sake of every animal, we want to build on the progress that has been achieved, and prevent new forms of suffering and exploitation from being established. But we can only continue with your support. Although, as a single individual, you may feel you can't make a difference, it really isn't true. Anything that you can do to increase our prospects of success will help bring closer the day when animals are saved from vivisection.
On December 10th, 1948, the United Nations ratified the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The Declaration established once and for all the principle that all human beings - however poor or powerless, whatever their colour, or gender or beliefs - have rights that no-one, no matter how powerful, may ever abuse or take away. Rights to live, to be free, to be protected from torture and to live their lives free of exploitation.
The UDHR symbolised the triumph of compassion and justice over the prejudices of the past, and even though we still have a long way to go before our world lives up to those ideals, holding those ideals makes us a better and more civilised human race.
But why should rights stop with human beings? There is a long and growing tradition that argues that animals have rights too. Is this an idea whose time has come?
Once upon a time, people thought that human rights, racial equality and democracy were crazy ideas. Could it be that the people of the future will one day look on the slaughterhouse and animal laboratory as we now look on the slave ship, the torture chamber and apartheid?
If we take a serious and intelligent look at this question, maybe we can see why there is a growing recognition that all animals deserve respect and the right to life and liberty, whatever their species.
The human race has, in fact, long recognised that it is wrong to treat animals as things. They experience pleasure and pain, happiness and suffering, in just the same way as we do. Science has taught us that we are, of course, animals ourselves, with our nearest relatives, the chimpanzee, sharing 99% of our genes.
People used to think that animals were just like machines, and that human beings could use them however they chose, but as we have become civilised we have come to understand that cruelty to animals is wrong. Now, some of us are saying, that if we recognise that cruelty is wrong, then animals should have the right to be protected from cruelty. If people have a right not to suffer, why not other animals?
Of course there are many differences between human beings and other animals, but that doesn't mean that animals can't have rights, there are differences between people too. Just because one person is less intelligent than another doesn't mean that their pain hurts less, or their life is worth less. Just because a baby or perhaps a person suffering from a mental handicap cannot tell the difference between right and wrong, does not mean that they can have no rights.
In fact, we recognise that we have a duty to protect and nurture those who cannot take a full part in our society - those who are weaker than ourselves. If we apply the opposite rule to animals - that because they are weak, or lack intelligence, we can use them however we choose - are we not guilty of hypocrisy and discrimination?
It is time to stop looking at our differences - which is the way of the racist, the sexist and the bigot - and start looking at our similarities. We know that animals, like us, suffer fear and pain, but they are still experimented upon in our laboratories.
We know that they form bonds of affection and perhaps even love with their families, just as we do, but calves are still taken from their mothers within days of their births.
We know that animals, like us, flourish in freedom, but still they are imprisoned in zoos, circuses, laboratories and on our factory farms.
Finally, we know that they, like us, will protect and preserve their own lives if they can, but they are still slaughtered in their billions for food which is unhealthy, unnecessary and environmentally destructive.
In 1799, people thought those who wanted to abolish slavery were crazy. In 1899, people thought the suffragettes were crazy. Now, in 1999, people are starting to realise that the idea of honouring the rights of animals isn't crazy, foolish or sentimental, but is just the next step along the journey to make our world a fairer, more compassionate and more civilised place.
We don't believe that rights belong to the few any more, we don't believe that the powerful may use the weak how they choose any more.
Even now in the new millennium, animals are abused and exploited in ways that could not even have been imagined a century ago; cloned, genetically engineered, factory farmed, poisoned in laboratories with chemicals nobody needs, and even, used as spare part factories for transplants.
More and more of us now believe that the future belongs to compassion and justice. We believe that one day the world will recognise fully the rights of animals just as it has recognised the rights of humans. We are campaigning for the future.
The animal and human rights movements have grown considerably over the last few years. Many of us now seek a more fulfilling set of ethics, with the number of those who now live a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle growing to such an extent that the food industry sees us as major consumers.
The powers that be try to hide and lie about the atrocities most accept as everyday life. We must now work together to expose the dangers threatening the existence of our planet and all who reside on it.
The time has come for those of us who really care to stand tall and scream for change.
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




In one BHF test, dogs' chests were cut open and their blood was circulated out of their bodies and back again, in order to allow blood pressure to change in the neck arteries quickly. The experimenters then came to the conclusion that a person bending down and suddenly standing up could experience dizziness and fainting!
In another experiment, dogs' blood vessels and nerves were cut away, the dogs were implanted with electrodes and they were injected with other dogs' blood. This was done to find out about blood storage in the liver, even though the experimenters acknowledged that dogs store their blood differently than humans do.
In a gruesome experiment on cats, the animals' chests were cut open, their back legs were skinned, tubes were inserted into their necks and legs and they were shocked and injected with sodium cyanide to test muscle reflexes and blood vessel activity.
Some health charities ask for donations to help people with diseases and disabilities yet spend the money to bankroll horrific experiments on dogs, rabbits, rats, mice, primates, hamsters, pigs, ferrets, frogs, fish, guinea pigs, sheep, birds and other animals. While human health needs cry out for attention and so many people are going without medical care, animal experimentation enriches laboratories and scientists but drains money from relevant and effective projects that could really help save lives.
Instead of ravaging animals’ bodies for cures for human diseases, compassionate charities focus their research where the best hope of treatment lies: with humans.
They realise that animal experiments are unnecessary, unreliable, and sometimes dangerously misleading. Enormous variations exist among rats, rabbits, dogs, pigs and human beings, and meaningful scientific conclusions cannot be drawn about one species by studying another. Non-animal methods provide a more accurate method of testing and can be interpreted more objectively.
Compassionate, modern charities know that we can improve treatments through up-to-date, non-animal methods, so they fund only non-animal research, leading to real progress in the prevention and treatment of diseaseâ€â€without starving, crippling, burning, poisoning or cutting open animals.
[img]http://In one BHF test, dogs' chests were cut open and their blood was circulated out of their bodies and back again, in order to allow blood pressure to change in the neck arteries quickly. The experimenters then came to the conclusion that a person bending down and suddenly standing up could experience dizziness and fainting!
In another experiment, dogs' blood vessels and nerves were cut away, the dogs were implanted with electrodes and they were injected with other dogs' blood. This was done to find out about blood storage in the liver, even though the experimenters acknowledged that dogs store their blood differently than humans do.
In a gruesome experiment on cats, the animals' chests were cut open, their back legs were skinned, tubes were inserted into their necks and legs and they were shocked and injected with sodium cyanide to test muscle reflexes and blood vessel activity.
Some health charities ask for donations to help people with diseases and disabilities yet spend the money to bankroll horrific experiments on dogs, rabbits, rats, mice, primates, hamsters, pigs, ferrets, frogs, fish, guinea pigs, sheep, birds and other animals. While human health needs cry out for attention and so many people are going without medical care, animal experimentation enriches laboratories and scientists but drains money from relevant and effective projects that could really help save lives.
Instead of ravaging animals’ bodies for cures for human diseases, compassionate charities focus their research where the best hope of treatment lies: with humans.
They realise that animal experiments are unnecessary, unreliable, and sometimes dangerously misleading. Enormous variations exist among rats, rabbits, dogs, pigs and human beings, and meaningful scientific conclusions cannot be drawn about one species by studying another. Non-animal methods provide a more accurate method of testing and can be interpreted more objectively.
Compassionate, modern charities know that we can improve treatments through up-to-date, non-animal methods, so they fund only non-animal research, leading to real progress in the prevention and treatment of diseaseâ€â€without starving, crippling, burning, poisoning or cutting open animals.[/img]
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




This really hurts me to look at becouse this rabbit looks just like one of mine. :'(
![]()
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support




Sorry, rhia I will use a link from now on. Sometimes shocking images have more results than anything else though.Originally Posted by Rhiannon link=board=1;threadid=14164;start=msg187002#msg187 002 date=1096877098
Im really sorry if I offended anybody.![]()
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support
It's alright Hon.. I admire you for feeling so strongly. I do as well. It's just best that links are provided, instead of the graphic pictures, in case other members click on the thread not knowing what to expect.
It is a very sad thing that animals are used in this manner. I'm all for letting the scientists be their own experiments and test on their damn selves.
*muah* sweetie. No worries, I'm just looking out for the other weak tummies.





I can't even begin to tell you all how pissed off and hurt I am after seeing these pictures.The human race is sick!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
One of woman's cardinal rule: Body parts can be fake,everything else has to be real.
一个女人的枢机规则:肢体可以伪造,一切必须真实.
中国大CHINESE BIG BOOBS!!!中国大
Much better title, Mag. Thanks for fixing it.
![]()




OTB-That's exactly how I feel. That's why I posted the pictures becouse so many people are totally unaware that this kind of stuff even goes on.
I thought well maybe one person will see this thread and make a change in one animals life. That's all it's really about to me is helping the underdogs which usually happen to be animals,women,and childern.
Obviously you and rhia are sensitive about this stuff too.
I can't tell you how many times I have seen a picture or read an article about an abused animal,woman,child and just cried and cried.
And sometimes I feel helpless and after seeing someof those pictures I was so upset I thought that maybe by posting something on this topic someone else would understand how I felt or someone would think of some wayto stop this- being that there are so many brillant minds on SW
And thank you so much rhia for letting me put up this post. It really does mean alot to me and im glad you are so cool about it your the best(and you know it)
And I promise that when I start my threads on domestic violence and child abuse in the future to use links not images![]()
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support





Mag,I'm all about animal rights.People that hurt animals should be shot,execution style.
One of woman's cardinal rule: Body parts can be fake,everything else has to be real.
一个女人的枢机规则:肢体可以伪造,一切必须真实.
中国大CHINESE BIG BOOBS!!!中国大
I a a huge donator and participator for PETA. Yea they can be a tad extreme at times, i get this shit all the time, but at times that is what it takes
We have a group of people who meet (voices for animals) was one, but kinda faded away to stick up for animals. I wont say what people do to protect these animals after the "owners" have been turned in, but alot of you may like the outcome.
I myself have rescued animals from homes etc. Will do it again too!!!
All this shit for the "name of science" that is great! Learn about disease, cures.......USE PRISONERS.
Pamela
I am also a member of PETA.. It outrages me to think of people doing this to animals! Fkr's! They deserve what OTB said, to be shot execution style! I don't mind seeing the photos, I have a very strong stomach but my anger towards the Fkr's and sadness for the animals envelopes me! :'(
Thank you so much for showing me what I already get everytime I get my PETA newsletter.
i just took in a stray kitten 2 days ago (emaciated and sick but you could tall he had a past owner). I cant stand animal cruelty. If i knew his past owners, i think i'd like to show them how it feels.



this is not only disgusting but i am so baffled on how the hell people can do this to animals and live with themselves afterwards,.. gosh im at a loss for words *tear*
So you buried all your lover's clothes and burned the letters lover wrote, but it doesn't make it any better. Does it make it any better?
And the plaster dented from your fist in the hall where you had your first kiss reminds you that the memories will fade. -Dashboard Confessional




Unfourtunatly, that is not a fake picture. It was taken undercover at a labrotory.Originally Posted by miss george link=board=1;threadid=14164;start=msg187184#msg187 184 date=1096914564
There are pictures much more bizarre and sickining than that one.
That picture was just one example of how pointless and creul animal experimentation is esp. with all the advanced technology ou there today.
'Success is relative. It is what we can make of the mess we have made of things.'
T.S Eliot
I believe you Dottie and you have my support
Bookmarks