karapatan ng mga hayop Club
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posted by knd-pom-sp
Poisoning, shocking, burning, and killing mga hayop is all in a day's work for vivisectors. If these atrocious acts were committed outside laboratories, they would be felonies. But mga hayop suffer and die every araw in laboratories with little or no protection from cruelty. Here are the tuktok reasons why it needs to stop:

It's unethical to sentence 100 million thinking, feeling mga hayop to life in a laboratory cage and intentionally cause them pain, loneliness, and fear.
It's bad science. The pagkain and Drug Administration reports that 92 out of every 100 drugs that pass animal tests fail in humans.

It's wasteful. Animal experiments prolong the suffering of people waiting for effective cures sa pamamagitan ng misleading experimenters and squandering precious money, time, and resources that could have been spent on human-relevant research.

It's archaic. Forward-thinking scientists have developed humane, modern, and effective non-animal research methods, including human-based microdosing, in vitro technology, human-patient simulators, and sophisticated computer modeling, that are cheaper, faster, and madami accurate than animal tests.

The world doesn't need another eyeliner, hand soap, pagkain ingredient, drug for erectile dysfunction, or pesticide so badly that it should come at the expense of animals' lives.
 it wrong
it wrong
added by fabgirl12
Watch these adorable shelter mga kuting in action i don't know how long its going on though :)
video
mga hayop
mga kuting
Pusa
added by glelsey
Source: BeFairBeVegan.com
added by GDragon612
added by glelsey
Source: Mercy For mga hayop
added by glelsey
Source: Animal Place
posted by glelsey
New figures from the Rabbit Welfare Association & Fund (RWAF), the biggest UK charity dedicated to improving the lives of ‘pet’ rabbits, ipakita that the number of unwanted rabbits has nearly doubled in kamakailan years.

The last meaningful survey conducted sa pamamagitan ng the charity estimated the number of rabbits ibingiay up to rescue shelters at around 35,000. The organisation has recently conducted another survey, and was shocked to find the figure now standing at well over 67,000.

‘What is really worrying,’ sinabi Richard Saunders, RWAF Veterinary Expert Advisor, ‘is that this number only reflects...
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added by fiyona
added by fiyona
Aso
added by __cooler
added by greekgeekgurl
added by glelsey
Source: Animal Place
Aso
added by __cooler