Animal 0 Posté(e) le 5 décembre 2010 Welfare groups say they're not activistshttp://www.producer.com/News/Article.aspx?aid=29601By ROBERT ARNASON, Brandon Bureau25/11/2010 12:00:00 AMAnimal welfare groups want producers to know that welfare isn't the same asrights.The distinction is important because welfare groups want to work with farmersrather than against them, says Geoff Urton, animal welfare co-ordinator with theBritish Columbia SPCA."Anything we can do, (we try) to communicate to producers that we're actually ontheir side," Urton said."Ultimately, we're trying to make sure they understand the seriousness of someof the consumer perceptions out there and helping them be proactive inpreventing consumer perception problems down the road."He admitted farmers might be shocked to be told that SPCAs are their allies,partly because farmers and the general public don't understand the differencebetween animal rights and animal welfare."It's not easy for Joe Public to pick up on the subtleties," Urton said.Radical positions and extreme actions have blurred the line between the twomovements, he added."So much damage (was) done by certain people in the past, whether they wereanimal rights or animal welfare, (because) they took too aggressive anapproach."The distinction between animal rights and animal welfare is clear to BillMacDonald, executive director of the Winnipeg Humane Society.Animal rights groups want to generate headlines and public sympathy, whileanimal welfare organizations work directly with government and industry tochange policies."There are off the wall groups, like PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment ofAnimals), who pull what I would call stunts, where they spill blood on people..I peg that as an activist," he said. "Whereas the humane society, we areadvocates or lobbyists.. We get in the room with the lawmakers."While the line is clear to him, MacDonald agreed with Urton that most farmersprobably don't make a distinction between animal advocates and activists.Canadian Federation of Humane Societies program director Shelagh MacDonald saidshe has learned firsthand about the public's misperception of animal welfareorganizations.About a decade ago, MacDonald and other lobbyists initiated a campaign tomodernize the section of the criminal code that pertains to cruelty to animals.MacDonald's efforts ultimately failed, butshestillrecallsthereactionfromfarmgroups when she launched the initiative."Frankly, I've been here 18 years and I was actually shocked that many of thosepeople and groups thought that we were animal rights," Mac-Donald said.The point of creating a new section for animals was to reflect Canadian valuesby treating cruelty cases as crimes that cause unnecessary suffering to animals,she said."We didn't want the criminal code to be used to prosecute farmers for doing whatthey are currently doing," she said.The proposed changes prompted hostile reactions from producer groups. Followingthe outrage, Mac-Donald realized her organization had to communicate moreeffectively with livestock groups."We are not a vegetarian promoting organization. We promote the humane treatmentof animals." Partager ce message Lien à poster Partager sur d’autres sites
animo-aequoanimo 0 Posté(e) le 5 décembre 2010 Des spécistes qui mangent de la viande. Partager ce message Lien à poster Partager sur d’autres sites