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Paul McCartney Is 'Looking for Changes' to Come for Animals Suffering in Labs

“We’ll all be looking for changes — changes in the way we treat our fellow creatures.”

In this animated music video to ‘Looking For Changes,” Beatles icon and long-time animal rights activist Paul McCartney is calling on YOU to speak up against cruel tests on animals.


Cats, rabbits, monkeys, and other animals are suffering for experiments RIGHT NOW.


Join Paul and tell congress to redirect funding to non-animal methods: https://www.peta.org/features/paul-mc...

At the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands, approximately 1,500 monkeys are used for breeding or experimentation at any one time. They're often shaved, crudely tattooed, placed in restraint cages, and infected with debilitating diseases.


Sometimes, after being sedated, these intelligent animals remain conscious during terrifying procedures, such as those in which tuberculosis bacteria are injected directly into their eyelids. Unable to escape, they're helpless to defend themselves.


Experiments on monkeys must stop now. The results of such studies aren't even relevant to humans.



A shocking undercover investigation has exposed appalling animal cruelty in a medical research facility in Germany. The documented animal abuse occurring at the laboratory is something out of a horror movie, yet it is the tragic reality for the millions of animal victims of toxicity testing. Please urge European decision-makers to take urgent action to review animal testing laws in the European Union.

An undercover investigation conducted by Cruelty Free International and SOKO Tierschutz at the Laboratory of Pharmacology and Toxicology (LPT) in Mienenbuttel, Lower Saxony, Germany has sparked global outrage. While working at the lab, an undercover investigator reported the routine torture of beagles, monkeys, and cats as part of hellish toxicity tests.



This horrifying undercover footage depicts beagles left bleeding in barren cages, sick from ingesting undisclosed substances from tubes that had been shoved down their throats. As facility staff conducted their experiments on them, the dogs appear desperate for human contact and heartbreakingly wag their tails at the people responsible for their misery.


The video also shows monkeys who are restrained with barbaric devices around their necks and their arms taped onto chairs to keep them from moving, screaming out in pain and terror. Some are shackled in tiny cages and rock back and forth and bounce around as they slowly go mad. Their dead bodies are dropped into buckets to discard.


And yet the cruelty depicted in this footage is not the result of a few sadistic scientists; in toxicity tests like these, the suffering occurs by design. The undercover investigator who filmed the disturbing footage observed that the "animals are injected with or made to eat or inhale increasing amounts of a substance to measure the toxic effects which can be severe and include vomiting, internal bleeding, respiratory distress, fever, weight loss, lethargy, skin problems, organ failure and even death. No anesthetics or pain relief are provided."


This is the incomprehensibly cruel reality for millions of animals used for medical research.


Unlawful dog and monkey suffering uncovered at Laboratory of Pharmacology and Toxicology (LPT)

WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGES

Our investigation with SOKO Tierschutz at the Laboratory of Pharmacology and Toxicology (LPT) in Germany has shed light on the horrors animals face behind closed laboratory doors.


Graphic footage of dogs left bleeding and dying, and monkeys being routinely abused, has lifted the lid of secrecy on regulatory safety testing.


We believe this abuse and the unimaginable suffering of cats, dogs and monkeys is unlawful. Yet this is the reality of laboratory life for animals. Will you stand with us and the millions of animals who suffer in laboratories?


Urge the EU to review animal testing laws: http://bit.ly/35srllx

Make a lifesaving gift for animals: http://bit.ly/2OC0ZY2

Read the full news article on our website: http://bit.ly/2B5L4cM


We are extremely grateful for everyone who has donated so generously this week to our BUILD IT! Campaign. If you haven't made a gift yet, will you help us reach our goal today in order to move chimpanzees out of labs and into sanctuaries?


More than 150 chimpanzees are still at the New Iberia Research Center, waiting to be transferred. Before they can be brought to Project Chimps, more new habitats must be built.

AAVS’s BUILD IT!


Campaign helps sanctuaries with their URGENT need to expand, ensuring that ALL retired chimpanzees have a home.


Project Chimps has a strategic plan to create a wonderful physical environment and social structure that will enable former research chimpanzees to choose where, how, and with whom to spend their time, while promoting the highest quality of life.


Their plan includes a 25-acre network of interconnected outdoor habitats and structures, providing chimps with dynamic opportunities to travel and explore, as their cousins do in the wild. But funding is needed to start construction.




Dogs, cats, monkeys, horses, mice, rats, and many other animals are being cut open, burned, poisoned, and killed in cruel and archaic experiments. But today, you can do twice as much to help end their suffering. Please donate to PETA's "Stop Animal Testing" challenge today – your gift will be matched, pound for pound, up to our £250,000 goal! DONATE NOW


Animal Testing Weekly Updates

"Corporations Are People Too My Friends."
Our companies are known for creating products that enhance people's lives.  Through Sunset Corporation of America and its companies, we’re equally dedicated to improving lives.  Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.

Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism. Activism and Sustainability:

  • Gun Safety & Gun Laws

  • Cruelty Free

  • Death Penalty

  • Demand Action

  • Sustainable Action Network

Fairness and Equality:

  • Grammy District Advocacy

  • Privatization

  • Voters Issues & Gerrymandering

  • Private Prisons & the War on Drugs

  • Finance, Housing & the Economy

Corporate Responsibility:

  • Candidates, Bills, Laws & Protections

  • Wildlife & Oceania

  • Labeling & Transparency

  • Comprehensive Captivity & Hunting Results Databases



On The Rampage w/ Don Lichterman talks about the the Stunt at the Impeachment Hearing, Phish live at the Met in Philly, 'You Can Have It All' by Eve Gallagher is the Sunset Music Video of the Week! GoPro, Be A Hero!, the Sustainable Action Network (SAN), Wildlife, Animal Welfare, Oceans, Whales on A Whale of a Week, Live Jam 107 this weekend with Live Phish, Live Talking Heads, Live String Cheese Incident, Dolphins at the Dolphin Outlook, Rescues at Rescue TV, Captivity DBases, Historic Year for Animals in California, Preventing Animal Cruelty & Torture Act, COP, PAW, Fin Act!

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In 'Wonderland,' Captive Orcas Dream of Freedom

To the tune of Lene Lovich's quirky '80s song "Wonderland," captive orcas dream about diving deep, feeling the ocean currents, and finally living like orcas. With this new video, the artist has teamed up with PETA to call on SeaWorld to release the orcas to seaside sanctuaries, where their dreams of freedom would be a reality.


Sea Life Park announces death of Kina the false killer whale

Sea Life Park Hawaii announced today the death of Kina, the false killer whale that had been a beloved part of its family since 2015. She was about 44 years old.


“We are all so saddened at the sudden passing of Kina,” said Valerie King, general manager of Sea Life Park, in a news release. “She was an ambassador for her kind, not only through her interactions with the community in our educational programs, but in shedding new light on ways to protect the hearing of marine animals and possibly prevent fishing line entanglements — a particular threat for an endangered species of pseudorca right here in Hawaii’s waters. She has made an indelible impact on all who knew her, and will continue to help the future of pseudorcas around the world.”


Sea Life Park said Kina participated in breakthrough research on cetacean sonar and hearing capabilities at a U.S. Navy program as well as at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology until 2015.


The park said her involvement in research on marine mammal hearing also led to findings that were later used to set legislative guidelines for man-made sounds in the ocean. Her amazing echolocation abilities also helped researchers further understand why cetaceans can become entangled in lines and nets, and may one day inform ways to prevent it.


Kina’s transfer to Sea Life Park was controversial, and criticized by activists who oppose keeping dolphins and whales in captivity in marine parks.


Kina was captured during a Japanese dolphin drive decades ago, according to the Associated Press, and was sold by a fishery to a Hong Kong amusement park before the U.S. Navy acquired her.


She was transferred to the park accompanied by her long-time Atlantic bottlenose dolphin companions, Boris and BJ.


Sea Life Park said she interacted with schoolchildren in educational programs and continued to provide insights to the academic community that would help to create a safer marine environment for her counterparts in the wild.


Now more than 50 years old, Lolita has lived at the Miami Seaquarium since her capture from Puget Sound in 1970.

Lolita is kept in too small a space which also fails to provide sufficient shelter from the sun. She has also been deprived of proper orca companionship since 1980, when her last companion, Hugo, rammed his own head against the tank’s wall until he died.



The conditions Lolita is being kept in are clear violations of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA), but despite the legal protection Lolita is entitled to under the AWA, the USDA failed to enforce the law and rubber-stamped the park’s license — allowing the Seaquarium to continually harm Lolita without facing consequences.


The captivity of wild animals in cruel conditions is the result of a legal system that too often regards animals as mere property.


The Animal Legal Defense Fund filed an appeal after a district court dismissed our lawsuit against the USDA for unlawfully transferring the park’s license to a new owner without requiring AWA compliance — we refuse to give up the fight for Lolita, but we need your help to win.

A new oil development in Alaska threatens to turn key habitat for polar bears, ice seals, whales and more into a massive industrial zone.


The development proposed by oil giant, ConocoPhillips, would build a huge oil field with hundreds of oil wells that would impact critical polar bear habitat and currently protected lands in the Teshekpuk Lake Special Area.


The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) recently released their Draft Environmental Impact Statement on the development, but they're rushing to authorize it as quickly as possible, with little regard for the impacts to wildlife.



Here's why we’re worried about the BLM’s impact statement: The current administration is trying to shrink Special Areas that protect wildlife to facilitate even more oil and gas drilling in the Arctic.


This statement comes as the BLM is revising the overall management plan for the area to expand drilling and reduce protected areas. Its priority is to support more oil and gas development, not to conserve wildlife, and that’s affecting its assessment of projects like the Willow development.


We need to stand up and make sure this agency is giving wildlife its due. Tell the BLM: Do your job and protect our wildlife and wild places!

Your voice is critical to making sure the public is included in this process and that the true impact of these oil and gas developments is being considered.


We can’t let the BLM gloss over the impacts and jeopardize the well-being of irreplaceable Arctic wildlife like polar bears, whales and seals. Speak up today!



Thank you for doing your part to protect Alaska's wildlife.


Scavenging Marine Life Devour Baleen Whale Remains

Deep-sea footage reveals scavenging marine life encompassing the remains of a baleen whale. Learn more about your favorite ocean creatures in our Marine Life Encyclopedia: http://bit.ly/2oc1zBb





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