Posts Tagged ‘Environment’
Send a Message to El Salvador: No More Elephants at Zoológico Nacional
On September 21 Manyula, the only elephant held at El Salvador’s Parque Zoológico Nacional de San Salvador, died at age 59 from kidney failure. She had lived in the zoo for almost her entire life, having been abducted from her family in India as a baby, and died without ever knowing the companionship and comfort of another elephant again.
Manyula arrived at the zoo in 1955, where she was kept in a tiny enclosure. Elephants naturally live in large family groups, in which female offspring remain with their mothers for life, yet Manyula spent her life entirely alone.
Though deprived of all that was natural to her, Manyula was a national icon, beloved by the people of El Salvador, hundreds of whom turned out for her burial at the zoo.
Now, the El Salvador Ministry of Culture is actively searching for another elephant to replace Manyula. You read that right: one elephant. According to an article in La Prensa, the agency is receiving proposals from various countries, including the U.S. Georgina Hernandez, director of cultural development, even claims to have been in touch with someone in Texas!
Please help IDA convey the message to Salvadoran officials that the zoo should not hold elephants at all, and that it should instead use its resources to improve the welfare of other animals at the zoo and to pursue its mission of preserving and protecting native species who are threatened with extinction.
Please click here to send an email to Dr. Héctor Samour, Secretary of the Ministry of Culture, the agency that oversees the Parque Zoológico Nacional de San Salvador, and to San Salvador Mayor Norman Quijano, urging an end to the display of elephants at the zoo.
By taking action you can ensure that another elephant is not subject to a lifetime of physical, social and mental deprivation at the Parque Zoológico Nacional de San Salvador.
Veganize A School Cafeteria Near You in 4 Easy Steps!
Now is the best time of year to make sure your school cafeteria has vegan options. Here’s how:
Step 1: Become Friends with Your School & Cafeteria
It is always easier to change a system from the inside. Just by stopping by and politely asking your Cafeteria’s food service coordinator for vegan options, you can make a personal statement on why these dishes are necessary and offer suggestions how they can make the changes. By building a relationship with your school’s food service coordinator you can help them locate the best recipes and resources so that these vegan changes can be successfully incorporated into the menu. If you’re too shy, send a kind e-mail or note to the head of your school’s cafeteria or dining hall requesting daily vegetarian and vegan options.
Of course, sometimes that doesn’t work. You can then move on to speaking to your school’s administration. Request a meeting with your school’s principal or, if you’re in college, your school’s Operations Director. Come to your meeting prepared to talk about why your school needs vegan options, what the benefits of a vegan diet are, suggestions for how they can veganize the cafeteria. Of course it doesn’t hurt to do a little research into how many of your classmates would want these options and if your school has had any issues with recalled meat or dairy products in the past (link to recent egg recall story) You can even contact other schools, such as Baltimore’s Public School System and Indiana University that have added vegan options to their cafeterias and get some statistics and suggestions to support your cause.
If you have any meetings, arrive on time, dressed nicely, and be polite. Don’t give them an excuse to ignore or disregard your request. Remember, you are there to advocate for the animals, so making a good impression is very important and, perhaps, this will be the beginning of a relationship with your school administration that could later help you also get dissection or circus field trips also removed from your school!
Cruelty Couture
Lady Gaga outdid even herself with her latest shocking “fashion” statement when she recently posed for Japan’s Men’s Vogue Magazine cover in a raw red meat bikini. Ok, you win Lady Gaga, or should I say Lady Gag-gag, we’re shocked and we’re talking about it. However, the dead animal hanging from her body certainly doesn’t win, and does need to be talked about.
Gaga has taken her “fashion” statements beyond soda cans in her hair and pearls glued to her face. Her latest flaunt has implications beyond mere material draped to her body, she has draped someone else’s body on her body and I, for one, am offended. Someone, or several someone’s, died for her statement.
Perhaps we should thank The Queen of Outlandish for giving us an opportunity to say “gross!”, as we should when we see cut up pieces of a dead animal. But beyond the gross factor, this blatant display was obviously intended for shock value. It is shocking to see bloody body parts from a tortured animal. Images of slaughterhouses and chain saws and gore are shocking; and what is even more shocking is that we eat it! Millions of animals endure extreme confinement, misery, pain and death on farms every day and it is all completely unnecessary as a plant-based diet is not only humane and healthier, it reduces our personal carbon footprint significantly.
I hope you will join IDA and go “gaga” for the compassionate vegan diet during World Go Vegan Week October 24 – 31. Let’s educate Lady Gaga on how we can end the suffering of farmed animals while taking care of our bodies and the planet. If you are interested in celebrating World Go Vegan Week with us by coordinating an event in your area, please contact hope@idausa.org.
All we are saying is “Give Geese A Chance”
A rally for the Canada geese of New York City. It could have been a dream, with all those people lining the steps of City Hall, but it was real. A day before, I had prepared my talk, and wrote about how wildlife does not belong to government agencies. I asked the crowd – the then imaginary crowd – to join with me in demanding changes for how our government deals with wildlife.
When I wrote those words I had no idea that one day later, more than 150 people would join the IDA rally for the Canada geese. I couldn’t have imagined the passionate and enthusiastic voices of Councilmember Letitia James and State Senator Eric Adams, who spoke about growing up with the geese in Prospect Park…. playing with them, learning about them. Or, as Senator Adams so eloquently said, learning that, in essence, they are really not that much different from us.
When I saw that spirited crowd, I knew that it was true. That people cared deeply and had come to speak up about putting a stop to the government killing of wildlife. To demand change.
Those words I spoke on Thursday August 12, 2010, could be addressed to any mayor in any city. They reflect the feelings of communities all across America, who have had their precious birds taken from them and slaughtered.
Mayor Bloomberg made the ludicrous statement that it comes down to people or geese.
It’s not about people or geese.
It’s about ways to co-exist peacefully with the animals of this earth.
It’s not about making airline flights safer. Killing resident Canada Geese has absolutely nothing to do with airline safety, as these geese don’t fly that high! There are, however, real ways to make airline flying safer, ways that do not require us to kill – and ways that other cities around the world currently engage in.
We will not stand by while you kill the geese who were over bred to satisfy hunters, and who flew away from the hunted areas to come live in the cities where they are safe.
We welcome them in our parks where they can be protected.
If there are too many geese today in Prospect Park, or Central Park, or Flushing Meadow Park, it’s because of government mismanagement, and we will not stand by while you make excuses to wipe out these wonderful flocks that live in our parks.
The people here in front of City Hall today are sending a message. The government’s war on wildlife needs to end and it needs to end now. Humane solutions exist and we demand that they be used.
Let’s start right here in New York City, home of a diverse community of compassionate and tolerant citizens, who have welcomed millions of people from around the world to take refuge in our city.
Out of this heritage of kindness and tolerance, let us reverse the senseless killing of animals perpetrated by government and herald in a new era for wildlife.
Urge the USDA to Stop Exterminating Canada Geese TODAY!
As the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Wildlife Services continue to systematically round up and exterminate entire flocks of resident Canada geese all over the country, IDA is calling on every one of our supporters to get involved to stop this needless killing. In 2010, thousands of innocent Canada geese across the country have been or will be gassed to death or sent to slaughterhouses if we do not take action to stop it. Since non-lethal population control programs for resident Canada geese have proven successful throughout the country, the USDA must change course and switch to non-lethal, humane, and progressive population control.
Every person I have spoken with, whether they be in New Jersey or New York, has been outraged, horrified or saddened by the eradication of geese in their communities. Many are sickened that the slaughter occurred despite public protest or without considering the interests of the vast number of residents who enjoy the presence of the geese in the parks. Of course, the lack of consideration of the interests of the geese themselves is even more disturbing.
IDA has produced another video highlighting the negative impacts of the USDA’s lethal course of action against geese. Click here to watch the video.
IDA encourages you to act to protect Canada geese in your community by contacting your city manager’s office to request a copy of their goose management plan. Also, please click here to send an e-mail to USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack, asking him to immediately end the slaughter of Canada geese.
With the help of each and every one of IDA’s supporters, we can make a positive difference for the Canada geese who call the United States home.
Breaking News About Elephants – Send a “Thank You” to Zimbabwe’s Prime Minister and Help Nosey Escape the Circus!
IDA has two new “Breaking News” items featured on www.HelpElephants.com that just by chance have a common thread (besides the fact they’re about elephants), and that’s the African nation of Zimbabwe.
We reported on an elephant named Nosey, who was traumatically torn from her family and shipped to the U.S. before she was even two years old – an age at which elephant babies are still nursing and enjoying the love and protection of their mother and herd. Nosey instead was sold into the circus, where she lost everything natural to an elephant: family, room to freely roam, companionship and freedom of choice. Since 1988, Nosey has endured a life of hardship and abuse, forced to give performances and rides with trainer Hugo Liebel and the Florida State Family Circus. (Though sometimes the circus and Nosey travel under different names.) Despite the fact that elephants are highly social and require the company of other elephants, Nosey has been held alone for 22 years.
IDA sent a letter to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, detailing the abuse and negligent treatment to which Nosey has been subjected for more than two decades and called on the agency to confiscate her now. Read IDA’s letter to the USDA here. While it appears that the agency is more closely monitoring Nosey’s situation, historically it has waited far too long to remove elephants who are in dire condition and suffering greatly. Our question is: How much more “monitoring” will it take to persuade the USDA that Nosey’s lengthy history of neglect and abuse will continue only as long as they allow it? You can take for action for Nosey by clicking here. You’ll find an easy click ‘n’ send letter directed at the USDA.
On a happier note, we have a great victory to report. Two elephant calves from Zimbabwe have avoided a captive fate and will remain in their native country. The government has called off a wildlife sale that would have sent two wild-caught, 18-month-old elephants, as well as giraffe, zebra, hyena, monkeys and birds, to a zoo in North Korea.
We are told that the majority of the captured animals have been released back into the wild through the efforts of wildlife groups in Zimbabwe, with the support of the Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority. The two young elephants cannot be released immediately but will be integrated into a herd of other rescued elephants at the Wild Horizons Wildlife Trust and later released into the wild.
While many people were angered by news of the sale, it appears that the government’s intentions were to raise badly needed funds to cut critical fire-breaks in Hwange National Park, where many of the animals were caught. Reportedly, the Zimbabwean government does not intend to undertake another similar capture.
This blog may focus on elephants but I wanted to share a warm story about two young hyena who had been caught for the sale to North Korea. Though they had been confined for two weeks in a holding boma, their parents stayed near, calling for them. When it came time to free them, the youngsters were released directly into Hwange National Park and back to their waiting parents. While hyena may not appear as “warm and fuzzy” to people as baby elephants or other animals, this story shows the depth and importance of family ties to a range of species – and how easily man can destroy those relationships.
You can see photos and read more reports about the wildlife release at this link and this link.
Please be sure to thank Zimbabwe’s prime minister for stopping the export and urge him to permanently ban the capture of wild for captivity. Get more information here and send your thank-you by clicking here.
Could BP’s “Cure” be Killing Any Hope of a Gulf Coast Comeback?
Workers using Corexit in the Exxon Valdez Spill. Photo Credit : The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council
It’s been over a month since President Obama and the EPA gave BP 24 hours to stop dumping the toxic oil dispersant Corexit into the Gulf of Mexico. The decision was first reported in the Washington Post immediately after Congress heard testimony from BP’s own executives and scientists confirming our worst fears. Not only is this highly toxic chemical relatively ineffective against this type of crude oil, but it was now adding more pollutants to the already poisoned waters.
Numerous independent scientists have come forward to say that Corexit is really only good for public relations. This carcinogenic, mutagenic, and highly toxic chemical does break up the oil into small somewhat transparent ripples and droplets that are more visually acceptable than images of giant black tides drowning wildlife and covering beaches. What the cameras don’t see is the long term damage to delicate ecosystems that are now struggling to escape toxic tides of chemicals. According to environmental engineer Joe Taylor the sulfur and sulfuric acid based dispersant will also deplete oxygen levels under the water, killing plankton and everything above plankton in the food chain. This is not new information. Corexit has been banned for years in the UK because of the long and short-term damage to wildlife and ecosystems. The world was first introduced to Corexit in 1989 when it was used in the Exxon Valdez spill. Images of the workers during that spill spraying the chemical in hazmat suits should have been our first clue something wasn’t quit right with this chemical.
So – why at the time of this decision had BP already sprayed over 600,000 gallons of Corexit on the surface of the Gulf with another 55,000 injected directly into the oil pouring out of the ocean floor? And why, one month later, have they been allowed to dump even more? It is estimated that more than 1.4 million gallons have already been used.
Fuming About the Oil Spill? Go Veg!
I love my morning ritual, sweating it out on the cardio machine with CNN’s Tony Harris for an hour. Tony’s chuckle always makes the dreadful news of the day go down easier. But for the last 58 days, even Tony’s sly smile can’t keep me from being sick to my stomach as I watch in the lower corner of the screen the continuous “live cam” of the underwater oil spill spewing massive plumes of brown into the ocean.
The BP oil spill is now the largest spill in U.S. history, churning out approximately 2 ½ million gallons of oil a day and showing no signs of slowing. The devastation to the Gulf’s ecosystem and wildlife is unimaginable. Watching the images of oil-soaked birds being scrubbed with tiny toothbrushes is just too much to bear.
We feel a pang of guilt at the pump as we fill up our tanks. Perhaps this disaster will inspire people to buy a hybrid or ride their bike.
But there are other ways, perhaps even more effective ways, to reduce our dependence on oil and it’s not at the gas pump.
Choosing to reduce or eliminate animal products from our diet drastically reduces our fossil fuel consumption; it takes eight times as much fossil fuel to produce animal products as is takes to produce plant foods. A recent University of Chicago study found that consuming no animal products is 50 percent more effective at fighting global warming than switching from a standard car to a hybrid. In fact, if everyone in the U.S. ate vegetarian for just one day, we would save 70 million gallons of gas- enough to fuel all the cars of Canada and Mexico combined with plenty to spare. That’s just one day!
The U.N. recently released an extensive report revealing that the greatest cause of greenhouse gas emissions is food production and animal products are by far the biggest culprits. The study recommends a world-wide shift to a vegetarian diet to save and feed the planet.
The environment isn’t the only causality from meat, milk and egg consumption. Farmed animals endure intensive confinement, painful procedures, brutal treatment, and a premature end to their miserable lives.
So when you are watching the footage of oil soaked marshes and brown stained beaches, know that we can take steps to reduce our dependence on oil three times a day. Reducing or eliminating animal products is one of the best ways to reduce your carbon footprint and to reduce your fossil fuel consumption. For more information on how to eat a cruelty-free, eco-friendly diet, please check out our Vegan Campaign.
New Celebrity Supporters Join IDA’s International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos on June 19th
“…When I see an elephant in a zoo, swaying back and force in a tiny space, I don’t learn anything other than this is no way to treat Earth’s largest land mammals. This is not education. This is not conservation. These animals are happiest and healthiest when they are in the wild. Please support IDA’s International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos by participating in an event near you.” – Actor Steve Guttenberg

On June 19th, elephant advocates around the world – from the U.S. to the U.K., Canada, and South Africa – will participate in the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ), with demonstrations and educational outreach events. Together we will send a loud and clear message that elephants just don’t belong in zoos.
Joining us in our call to end the suffering of elephants in zoos are our IDAEZ 2010 celebrity supporters, including Lily Tomlin, Steve Guttenberg, Jorja Fox, Kathy Joosten, Elaine Hendrix and Dick Donner (producer of the film Free Willy).
IDA is extremely grateful for their support and the attention it brings to this very serious issue. As you may know, Lily Tomlin (currently seen on Damages) has often spoken publicly about elephants. She testified before the Los Angeles City Council against a wasteful $42 million elephant renovation at the L.A. Zoo, and has spoken out for the elephants at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle and the Bronx Zoo in New York. A self-avowed “animal freak,” Jorja Fox (CSI, ER, West Wing) is another celebrity who is very active for animals and recently took part in a lion rescue. Elaine Hendrix (Parent Trap) is passionately committed to animal causes; she serves as a member of IDA’s Board of Directors. We hope you’ll take time to read the personal and very heartfelt statements about elephants in zoos written by some of these celebrities.
You can help make this event a mammoth success for the elephants by participating in an IDAEZ event near you. If you don’t live near a zoo with elephants, you can still participate. Stay tuned to this blog next week for details on a very special way you can take part in IDAEZ, no matter where you live. (Shhh! It’s a secret.)
For a list of event locations and for more information on IDAEZ, click here. And be sure to visit our special Facebook events page.
IDA’s Renewed Vision – Tear Down The Cages!
Throughout my 20 years in the animal protection field I have admired the work of In Defense of Animals, and I’m truly honored to accept the position of President of this esteemed organization. I feel very fortunate to have inherited a solid foundation created by Dr. Elliot Katz, and look forward to building on this platform of excellence in order to expand IDA’s positive impact for animals.
More than two decades ago I realized the common thread in the network of animal cruelty – the cage. The cage represents the imprisonment and mistreatment of the animals of this world. I have focused my career on tearing down these cages in their many forms and uses.
The cage is a fundamentally flawed contraption that causes rapid emotional, social and physical decline of its inhabitants. In my experience any animal confined to a cage goes through three phases of decline; typically starting with high anxiety, leading to depression, and resulting in psychological turmoil. Putting an animal in a cage is a violation of that creature’s innate right to live naturally and without suffering. This type of confinement also forces animals to eat, sleep and defecate in a space often only a few times the size of their body. This causes human and animal health problems and can ultimately lead to death in some species.
I conceptualized and built a revolutionary cageless animal shelter that set global humane standards. I lobbied for the adoption of guardian language to change people’s ideas concerning our relationships with animals. I lead the rescue of tens of thousands of animals from puppy mills, dog and cock fighting, hoarding cases, equine farming and countless other cruel instances of confinement and mistreatment. I have liberated hundreds of thousands of animals from the confines of cages and the grip of man-made cruelty.





