animo-aequoanimo 0 Posté(e) le 13 mars 2006 Editor, The Telegram St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador Dear Editor, Would you believe that somewhere in Canada, there is a horse farm that skins 7,000 horses alive every year? Being skinned alive is probably on par to being burnt alive on the pain scale. Anyone doubting this, try peeling your next hang-nail backwards please. We know that cat and dogs are being tortured hideously before being killed for meat, but that is in Korea. To skin horses by the thousands alive, here in Canada? Incredible. True. But change "horse" to "seal", and it suddenly becomes acceptable, respectable, promotable, and in fact actively promoted by the government. Further, the government uses tax-payers' money to employ the Coast Guard to make sure that the atrocity is not observed. Why is that? Are seals less susceptible to pain than horses? What do you call deliberately imparting pain on a sentient being? Webster calls it "sadism". How can making profit justify sadism? There is one person we can ask. Simple. Statistics, stupid. In your article titled "IFAW wants apology" (March 9, 2006), the Newfoundland premier justifies skinning 7,000 baby seals alive, and/or by some other horrendous method which even he would consider inhumane, by proudly quoting a 2002 Canadian Veterinary Medical Association report, which found that "98 per cent of seals are killed in an acceptably humane manner" 98% posiitive means 2% negative. Just 2%? It certainly doesn't sounds even 1% as bad as 7,000, does it? Everything is relative, but here is something absolute. At about one meter per seal, a single file of 7,000 live-skinned seals stretches 7 kilometers, or 35 city blocks. Walk this distance as a meditative experience please, Mr. Willams.. Mr. Williams is smart. He chooses the report that gave the highest pecentage figure for the number of those seals deemed killed humanely, by whatever lowered threshold of evaluation on humaneness. I have read other equally authoritative reports, some rating the percentage of seals killed inhumanely at 10%, 20%, or even 40%. Ultimately, it come to the moral quality of the human species. Is it morally justifiable to deliberately skin-alive even one seal, or one horse, or one dog, or one cat, for any reason? Here is a test for the moral fibre of Mr. Williams. Hakkapics are a dime a dozen. Here is one for you, Mr. Williams. And here in front of you is a totally helpless and defenseless baby seal. Don't worry Mr. Williams, it is older than 2 weeks and has sprung a few grey hairs. Go ahead and bash it, Mr. Williams. Oh, and you missed crushing its skull and it is still moving? Here is a knife. Go ahead, skin it, Mr. Williams. "B-But I'm not a sealer," stutters Williams. I know. You are worse. Whereas a sealer who kills 100 seals has the blood of 100 seals on his hands, Mr. Williams, your hands are dripping with the blood of 350,000 sentient creatures, what the Chinese call "sea leopards". Anthony Marr, founder HOPE-CARE Foundation 604-222-1169 Vancouver, BC. Partager ce message Lien à poster Partager sur d’autres sites