¥Æ¥¹¥È¤Ê¤ê - 02/05/19 02:22:27
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"What happens to animals in factory farming is not right"
Volkert van der Graaf
Even in elementary school I was interested in animals, the environment and nature. I was a member of
the WWF Rangers, and we did things like picking up garbage in the dunes, etc.
I also used to fish, with my brother who was two years older. I used to get a kick out of catching fish.
My brother put the worms on the hook. I did think it was mean on the worms and the fish. It just
wasn't right, but apparently everyone thought it was normal.
During my high school years this feeling that something was not right, increased. People think it normal
that you eat animals, and that you let fish suffocate in nets when you catch them. But inside me arose a
sense of justice; such things shouldn't be happening in a civilized country, I thought, but there's no one
to stand up for them.
When I was 15, I worked at a bird shelter in Zeeland. Only 2 percent of the birds that were brought in
covered in oil survived. I wanted to prevent suffering, and I didn't agree with the suffering of the birds
that died slowly from the oil in their intestines. At that place it was a taboo to end that life. The others
thought you simply had no right to end it. At the same time they put out mousetraps to kill the mice that
were stealing the bird food. I left that place, I didn't want to be inconsistent any longer.
At one point I wanted to stop eating meat, but my parents wouldn't let me because you had to eat
meat. Only after I started studying in Wageningen I gave it up. The questions remained: is leather OK,
is milk OK, are eco-eggs OK?
Then I became a vegan. It took some effort, but once you are one, it becomes normal fast, you know
where to find things. Sometimes when you have dinner with other people, you encounter
incomprehension.
During my studies I involved myself in the use of laboratory animals. I joined a regional group of the
NBBV (anti-vivisection federation), did stand work, went to work for Lekker Dier, teach at schools,
I've been involved in several actions.
As a member of the IUOD (Inter University Consultation on Animal use) we tried to bring back the
number of laboratory animals used in education. We fought for the right not to have to use test animals
in our studies, we made a survey on laboratory animal use for certain subjects, and we tried to offer
support to students who were against this as well and told them how they could lodge their objections.
We didn't want to impose a standard, but present facts. Students could make up their own minds
based on the descriptions of animal tests and the procedure that they could follow to be exempted
from animal testing. We asked them: do you want to cut into a dead piglet or into sharks that were
caught as by-catch during herring fishery?
Now I'm working for Milieu Offensief (Environment Offensive) that is involved in the environment as
well as animal welfare. Whatever your motives are for working here, you work together toward the
same result: stopping the expansion of factory farming. The result is less pollution of the environment
and less animal suffering. Through legal procedures we fight permits for factory farms and fur farms,
using the law as our tool.
In the past few years we have been through as much as 2000 legal procedures, we won a lot, but now
we are going to apply ourselves more to the heavy offenders of environment and animal suffering.
My actions don't come so much from love for animals, I just have a basic standard: "what happens to
animals in factory farming is not right". For the rest I just act rationally, I don't have to be an animal
friend to protect animals.
Many animal protectors act from the assumption that "nature is good", but every dark side of humans
can also be found in nature. Protecting animals is civilizing people, as they say.
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É÷Íå - 02/04/11 23:53:41
ÅŻҥ᡼¥ë¥¢¥É¥ì¥¹:hydeist_hyde@msn.com
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